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Asian American Children: A Historical Handbook and Guide: Children and Youth: History and Culture

Autor Benson Tong
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 iun 2004 – vârsta până la 17 ani
The presence of Asian immigrants and citizens has a long history in the United States. Asian American Children: A Historical Handbook and Guide provides insights into the diverse experience of these children and their families from their first appearance here to the present. Essays review topics such as identity, family structures, labor, gender, and class. Selected primary documents review topics such as racial quotas, biculturalism, and refugees. This is the first work to cover the historical and the contemporary experience of these children from a multiplicity of views, using essays and documents.Beginning c. 1850, this work relates the experiences and context in which diverse groups of Asian American children lived their lives. The voices of children, included in the primary documents, provide a vivid narrative of immigrant life over the past 150 years. While the lives of children were generally included in historical narratives of the country, a focus specifically on children allows the reader to more fully understand the central place of family in the economic and social development of a nation.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780313330421
ISBN-10: 0313330425
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.76 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Greenwood
Seria Children and Youth: History and Culture

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

BENSON TONG is Assistant Professor of History at Wichita State University and the author of several books on Asian Americans and Native Americans.

Cuprins

AcknowledgmentsInterpretive EssaysIntroduction: The Worldview of Asian American Children by Benson TongInvisible Historical Players: Uncovering the Meanings and Expereinces of Children in Early Asian American History by Yong ChenThe Convergence of the Twain: Representations of Asians in St. Nicholas Magazine, 1888-1910 by Claudia NelsonGrowing up in "Hop Alley": Chinese American Youth in St. Louis during the Early 20th Century by Huping LingRace, Generation, and Culture among Japanese American Children and Adolesents during the Internment Era by Benson TongGender, Family, Community: Cultural Reconstruction among Teenage Laotionan Girls in Northern California by Bindi ShahEnsuring Upward Mobility: Obligations of Children of Immigrant Entrepreneurs by Lisa Sun-Hee ParkTransnationalism among Second-Generation Asian Indians by Jean BaconDocumentsFirst Experiences in America by Yan Phou LeeImmigration Interview TranscriptsAn Agreement to Assist a Young Girl Names Loi YauDiary by Ah QuinThe Curious Case of Ah-Top (A Chinese Legend)The Children of Chinatown in San Francisco by Theodore WoresQuiet Oddessey by Mary Paik LeeA Native Filipino's Impressions of America by AnonymousJuan, the Story of a Filipino Boy by Helen P. BeattieGong Lum et al. v Rice et al.(1927) United States Supreme CourtMy Contact with Orientals by Miss Lentz (Teacher in Franklin High School, Seatlle)Interview with Miss Chiyo Otera Conducted by William C. Smith by Chiyo OteraLife History of J. Lim by J. LimInterview with Thomas W. Chinn Interview conducted by Ruth TeiserBuddhism in the United States War Relocation Authority, Community Analysis SectionThe Autobiography of Wayne Hung Wong by Wayne Hung WongMy Viewpoint of the Evacuation by Stanley HayamiThe War Stamps or Bond That You Bought Today by Fumiye AndoEducation Section: Final Report, 1945 by Lloyd A. Garrison Stanley Hayami Diary by Stanley HayamiLetter from Ontario, Oregon, 1944 by Shirley SugahiroThe Homeless Asian American by Lee FangSoukanthone "Aly" Vonckamchanch Interview conducted by Sheri A. SaundersPetition for Immigration of Amerasian Children by Unidentified Vietnamese WomenLetter to U.S. Congress from Amerasian Youth by Lily LeeLife History Interview: Niloufer Aziz Interview conducted by Jean BaconWhen Being Best Isn't Good Enough: Why Yat-Pang Won't Be Going to Berkeley by Linda MatthewsEverybody Seemed to Be Either White, Black, or a Full Race by Lisa GrahamBibliography