A portrait of Chinese-American life documents the stories of Chinese pioneers who entered the country from the west coast in the mid-nineteenth century, illuminates the roles of Chinese-American transnationals who have shaped American multiculturalism, and considers the roles of Chinese Americans in immigration, globalization, and foreign policy. 15,000 first printing. - (Baker & Taylor)
In their historical narrative of 150 years of Chinese-American experience, Kwong (City U. of New York) and Miscevic (PhD, Columbia U.) seek to capture the complexity of Chinese life in the United States, analyzing the how national debates about race, class, immigration, and foreign policy impacted Chinese communities and the shifting and varied responses of different Chinese-Americans to the historical tides of the United States. This book was originally announced with a different subtitle: A History in the Making. Annotation ©2006 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) - (Book News)
A sweeping portrait of one of America's most distinctive communities from the bestselling author of The New Chinatown. From award-winning author Peter Kwong and Dusanka Miscevic comes a definitive portrait of Chinese Americans, one of the oldest immigrant groups and fastest-growing communities in the United States. Beginning with stories of Chinese frontiersmen who came to the West Coast by the thousands in the mid-nineteenth century and continuing to the high-tech transnationals who have helped spark the development of today's booming Chinese American "ethnoburbs," this engrossing narrative recounts stories of extraordinary hardship, discrimination, and success. Chinese America is a landmark analysis that draws on firsthand reporting in Asia and the US. Offering a new picture of the country's development, Kwong and Miscevic provide the first comprehensive report on the suburban immigrant communities that are transforming America. Urban ghettos continue to host some of the country's poorest immigrants, but Chinese Americans now live in the suburbs in similar proportions to whitesand have brought with them Chinese supermarket chains, language schools, and growing clout in America and Asia. Exploring the burgeoning tradeand underlying conflictsbetween China and the US, Chinese America reveals the complex connections between immigration, globalization, and foreign policy in our time. - (Norton Pub)