Chinese Chicago: Race, Transnational Migration, and Community Since 1870 (Asian America) Buy on Amazon
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Chinese Chicago: Race, Transnational Migration, and Community Since 1870 (Asian America)

21.86 24.95 -12% USD

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Book Details
Author(s) Huping Ling
ISBN / ASIN 0804775591
ISBN-13 9780804775595
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #767,534
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
Numerous studies have documented the transnational experiences and local activities of Chinese immigrants in California and New York in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Less is known about the vibrant Chinese American community that developed at the same time in Chicago. In this sweeping account, Huping Ling offers the first comprehensive history of Chinese in Chicago, beginning with the arrival of the pioneering Moy brothers in the 1870s and continuing to the present.

Ling focuses on how race, transnational migration, and community have defined Chinese in Chicago. Drawing upon archival documents in English and Chinese, she charts how Chinese made a place for themselves among the multiethnic neighborhoods of Chicago, cultivating friendships with local authorities and consciously avoiding racial conflicts. Ling takes readers through the decades, exploring evolving family structures and relationships, the development of community organizations, and the operation of transnational businesses. She pays particular attention to the influential role of Chinese in Chicago's academic and intellectual communities and to the complex and conflicting relationships among today's more dispersed Chinese Americans in Chicago.
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