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         Chinese Asian Americans:     more books (100)
  1. John Leighton Stuart and Twentieth-Century Chinese-American Relations (Harvard East Asian Monographs) by Shaw Yu-ming, 1992-02-01
  2. Hometown Chinatown: A History of Oakland's Chinese Community, 1852-1995 (Asian Americans : Reconceptualizing Culture, History, and Politics) by Eva Armentro Ma, 2000-11-29
  3. The Economic condition of Chinese Americans (Monograph series - Pacific/Asian American Mental Health Research Center ; no. 3)
  4. Assumptions of Asian American similarity: the case of Filipino and Chinese American students.: An article from: Social Work by Pauline Agbayani-Siewert, 2004-01-01
  5. Chinese American Transnationalism: The Flow of People, Resources (Asian American History & Cultu) by Sucheng Chan, 2005-12-28
  6. If They Don't Bring Their Women Here: Chinese Female Immigration before Exclusion (Asian American Experience) by George Peffer, 1999-07-16
  7. In Search of Justice: The 1905-1906 Chinese Anti-American Boycott (Harvard East Asian Monographs) by Guanhua Wang, 2002-01-30
  8. Vera Wang Queen of Fashion; Amazing Chinese American (Biographies of Amazing Asian Americans) (Biographies of Amazing Asian Americans) (Biographies of Amazing Asian Americans) by Ai-Ling Louie, 2007-03-24
  9. National Directory of Asian Pacific American Organizations 1997-98 by Organization of Chinese Americans, 1997
  10. Journey to Gold Mountain: The Chinese in 19Th-Century America (The Asian American Experience) by Rebecca Stefoff, Ronald T. Takaki, 1994-02
  11. Asian-American ethnic studies: Chinese-Americans, Japanese-Americans, Korean-Americans by Keiko Panter, 1975
  12. Asian Americans in documents, Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos & Hawaiians: An annotated bibliography by Elizabeth DeLouis Gordon, 1975
  13. Towards a history of Chinese in Queens (Working papers/ Asian/American Center) by Hsiang-shui Chen, 1989
  14. From Golden Mountain to the Millennium: CHinese American Studies in the 20th Century (Asian Americans : Reconceptualizing Culture, History, Politics) by Susie La Cassel, Susie Lan Cassel, 2001-12-01

21. Asian-Nation : Asian American History, Demographics, & Issues :: Interracial Dat
chinese. Husbands, chinese, 89.5. (533134), Other asians, 4.1 These days, asian americans in interracial relationships are very common.
http://www.asian-nation.org/interracial.shtml
Article, discussion, and statistics from the 2000 Census about the history and contemporary characteristics of interracial dating and marriage among Asian Americans, including comparisons of outmarriage rates between the six largest Asian ethnic groups and husbands and wives. Please enable JavaScript in your browser to maximize your experience and enjoyment at Asian-Nation.
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Research Resources Used/
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Constable, Nicole. 2003.
Romance on a Global Stage: Pen Pals, Virtual Ethnography, and "Mail Order" Marriages . Berkeley: University of California Press.
Crohn, Joel. 1995.
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22. Asian Americans
asian American Immigration. chinese. MIGRATION. Beginning in the 1980s, we have been one of the fastest growing immigrant groups here in the United States.
http://www.maxwell.syr.edu/maxpages/classes/soc248/Asianas Post WWII 4-24-00 .ht
Asian American Immigration CHINESE MIGRATION Beginning in the 1980s, we have been one of the fastest growing immigrant groups here in the United States. A 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act began to eliminate some of the anti-Asian racism. The act reunified families, protected the domestic labor force, and called for immigration of people with needed skills. It also made us eligible for citizenship, which we had long been waiting for. The 1965 Immigration Act abolished the national-origins quota system and created an annual quota of 20,000 of us Asians. Therefore, the amount of immigrants increased drastically as time progressed. STEREOTYPES Almost ninety percent of Chinese immigrants were women between 1946 and 1952. About 348,000 of us came here from Hong Kong and Taiwan between 1941 and 1980. Beginning in 1981, the number of immigrants increased coming from the mainland as opposed to coming from Hong Kong and Taiwan. We reached a population of 1.6 million people between 1980 and 1990. By the mid-1990s we were approximately one-third of all Asian Americans. As Chinese Americans, we are often mistaken for Vietnamese or Korean Americans. In 1994, Asian Americans were thought of as foreigners who consistently competed for jobs. We have been stereotyped as "model minorities" because we are ambitious and hard working. After the United States declared war on Japan in 1941

23. Asian American Studies -- Duke University Libraries
chinese students place, South asian americans. Emigration and immigration lawcountry/place, Triads (Gangs). Filipino americans, Vietnamese americans
http://www.lib.duke.edu/reference/asia-am.htm
Catalog Ask A Librarian Your Accounts Hours ... Contact Us
The Asian American Experience:
A Guide to Selected to Resources in
Perkins Library
CONTENTS
Background Reference Sources: Dictionaries, Encyclopedias and Atlases
Bibliographies

Directories

Asian American Organizations at Duke University
...
Additional Duke and Other Web Sites

This guide is intended to be an overview of how to identify reference, primary and secondary source materials; it is not a complete review of resources. For additional information see a librarian at the Reference Desk.
BACKGROUND REFERENCE SOURCES:
DICTIONARIES, ENCYCLOPEDIAS AND ATLASES
Avakian, Monique. Atlas of Asian-American History . New York: Checkmark Books, 2002. (Ref. 973.0495 A945 A881 2002) Asian American Encyclopedia . Ed. by Franklin Ng. New York: Michael Cavendish, 1995. (Ref. 973.0495003 A832 1995) Dictionary of Asian American History. Ed. by Hyung-chan Kim. New York: Greenwood, 1986. (Ref. 973.0495 D554 1986) The Encyclopedia of the Chinese Overseas. Gen. ed., Lynn Pan. Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1999. (Ref. 304.80951 E56 1999)

24. Asian Americans In The Santa Clara Valley
asian Art Museum of San Francisco; chinese americans. chinese American Cultural Center Crosscultural Community Services Center San Jose chinese Alliance
http://www.scu.edu/SCU/Programs/Diversity/scvasian.html
Asian Americans
Santa Clara Valley
The Basics

25. Asian American - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
East asian americans. chinese American Japanese American Korean American Pacific Islander; Lists of asian americans List of chinese americans,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asian_American
Asian American
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
An Asian American can be generally defined as a person of Asian ancestry or origin who was born in or is an immigrant to the United States The term "Asian American" is credited to the historian Yuji Ichioka who, in the late , used it to describe members of a new pan-ethnic radical political identity who shared common histories, experiences, and goals. In the United States, this term has widely supplanted the term " oriental " which was popularly used before the to describe East Asian peoples regardless of nationality, upbringing, or origin. Some have argued "oriental" is politically loaded and referenced a colonial "other" (see orientalism "Asian American", like " Hispanic American ", can not be defined as a similar group of people sharing similar cultures or physical features. For example, Indian Americans Filipino Americans , and Japanese Americans are very different from each other in both culture and physical features. Like the term "Hispanic American", saying that a person is "Asian" is not specifically referring to a certain lifetyle or culture and could refer to a wide range of different Asian ethnic sub-groups. Additionally, although the term "Asian" in the United States is most popularly used as a term to group peoples with physical characteristics resembling East Asian people, Asians from the

26. Chinese American - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Two incidents have energized some chineseamericans and other asian americans, particularly American-born chinese in recent years the murder of Vincent
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_American
Chinese American
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
A Chinese American is an American who is of ethnic Chinese descent. Chinese Americans constitute one group of overseas Chinese and are also one group of Asian Americans . Numbering 2.3 million in Chinese Americans make up 22.4% of Asian Americans (larger than any other Asian American subgroup), and constitute just over 1% of the United States as a whole.
Contents
edit
Immigration
Chinese railroad workers in the snow — 19th century Chinese immigration to the United States has come in several waves. According to records from the United States government, the first Chinese arrived in the United States around 1820. Subsequent immigrants that came from the 1820's up to the late 1840's were mainly men, who came in small numbers. However, due to the lack of Chinese women in the United States at that time, many of them intermarried with Americans of European descent. The best known Chinese immigrants that came during this period are the world-famous Siamese twins Chang and Eng Bunker The major initial wave only started around the 1850s. This was when the

27. ICC - Asian Americans & Cancer
Cancer is the leading cause of death for female asian americans. A major problem in chinese women is that approximately 22% often use herbal remedies
http://iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts/cfs3.htm
iccnetwork.org/cancerfacts News Cancer Facts Biennial Symposium Resources ... Search this site
Who We Are "Asian American" refers to persons whose familial roots originate from many countries, ethnic groups and cultures of the Asian continent, including (but not limited to): Asian Indian, Bangladeshi, Bhutanese, Burmese, Cambodian, Chinese, Filipino, Hmong, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Malayan, Mien, Nepalese, Pakistani, Sikh, Sri Lankan, Thai and Vietnamese. According to US Census Data, the Asian American population consists of these percentages of ethnicities: 23.8% Chinese, 20.4% Filipino, 12.3% Japanese, 11.8% Asian Indian, 11.6% Korean and 8.9% Vietnamese. Seventy percent of US Asians are immigrants who entered the US during one of three distinct immigration waves: before 1975, between 1975-1979, and 1980 or later. Most Asian Americans who have arrived since 1965 still live in ten large metropolitan areas. In 1996, an estimated four in ten Asian Americans lived in California. These US Asian-born individuals emigrated from countries with the overall lowest breast cancer rates in the world.

28. Beyond Culture: Communicating With Asian American Children And Families
Communicating with asian American Children and Families Like middleclass americans, East asians, particularly chinese, highly value formal education.
http://www.casanet.org/library/culture/communicate-asian.htm
Library: Cultural Competency Beyond Culture:
Communicating with Asian American Children and Families
Document Author : Gary Huang, Teachers College, Columbia University,
Date Posted: Introduction
The API Community

API Cultures and Communication

Overt Culture

Hidden Culture
...
References

Introduction In recent decades, migration waves have brought to the United States large numbers of Asians and Pacific Islanders (API) Well over two-fifths of all nonamnesty persons admitted in the U.S. in 1991 were API ( Barkan. 1992) The trend of increasing API immigration is clear the API portion in the U S. total immigration steadily grew from the 1972's 28.7 percent to 1985's 44 2 percent (Barkan, 1992) Consequently, API student enrollment has been increasing drastically. In 1979, 217,000 enrolled 8-15 year old APIs were identified as language minorities; by 1989, the number had reached 547,000 (National Center for Education Statistics. 1992) With their drastically different cultural backgrounds, API children's schooling poses a challenge to educators and the society
The API Community
It is important not to generalize an understanding of one group to another. For example, the Vietnamese and Hmong, though both Indochinese, differ in their basic cultural patterns The Vietnamese, many with a (Chinese ancestry. have a sophisticated literate culture and strong abilities to adapt to the market society; the

29. Chinatowns And Other Asian-American Enclaves | Chinatowns
Today, chinese are the largest asian group in the United States, According to the 2000 census, there are 10 million americans of asian ancestry,
http://www.factmonster.com/spot/chinatowns1.html

30. WestWeb Asian-Americans In The West
This section of WestWeb provides information about asianamericans in the West. Under Texts you will find examples of primary texts, such as the chinese
http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/westweb/pages/asian.html

31. CNN - Asian-Americans Fear Backlash From China Espionage Report - May 27, 1999
asianamericans fear backlash from China espionage report But the festival came as many asian-americans say they are beginning to experience prejudicial
http://www.cnn.com/US/9905/27/chinese.american.reax/

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Asian-Americans fear backlash from China espionage report
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CNN's Don Knapp looks into the problems the alleged espionage is causing some Chinese Americans Windows Media May 27, 1999 Web posted at: 10:55 p.m. EDT (0255 GMT) LIVERMORE, California (CNN) Some Asian-Americans who work in the technology field fear a backlash in the wake of the congressional report alleging that China stole nuclear weapons secrets from U.S. laboratories. "There are some sensitive feelings," said Ray Ng , a scientist at the Sandia National Weapons Laboratory in Livermore, California. "We feel there is a cloud of suspicion over all Asians as a result of allegations over one individual." Wen Ho Lee, a Taiwanese-born scientist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, was investigated in relation to the allegations of China espionage. He was fired in March for alleged security violations, although he has not been charged with any crime.

32. In Search Of Asian American Cinema By Peter Feng Cineaste
The term asian American Cinema, which includes works in video and film, chinese americans were joined in protest and action by other asian americans,
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/InSearchofAsian.html
In Search of Asian American Cinema (Race in Contemporary American Cinema, part 3)
by Peter Feng Cineaste v21, n1-2 (Wntr-Spring, 1995):32 (4 pages).
Cineaste Publishers Inc. Used in the UCB Media Resources Web site with permission. What is Asian American Cinema, anyway?" The question came from a colleague in the discussion group that had formed to discuss a film and video series I had programmed for the Institute for Cinema and Culture at the University of Iowa, and the question was directed at me. "What are you going to say in your article," asked the filmmakers who knew I was attempting to answer this question. "How are you defining Asian American Cinema?," asked my friends on other campuses, themselves struggling to answer the same question. "I don't know," I replied. "The only thing I do know is that my students are helping me to redefine 'Asian American Cinema' every week, and I'm sure that any answer I give today I will abandon before the end of the semester." The term 'Asian American Cinema,' which includes works in video and film, implies first of all that there is such a thing as Asian American Culture. But is there such a thing as a unified Asian American Culture? Of course, the term culture is itself a slippery one - is there such a thing as American Culture, for example? Europeans might say yes; many Americans, especially people of color, would say no.

33. Asian, Pacific, & South Asian American Video: Media Resources Center UCB: Chines
The Movies, Race, Ethnicity (for cinema works by asian American filmmakers or films with Presents chinese americans contributions during World War II,
http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/MRC/chineseamvid.html
Chinese Americans
  • The Movies, Race, Ethnicity (for cinema works by Asian American filmmakers or films with images of Asian Americans
  • People of Mixed Race - Interracial Marriage/Dating
  • Alleged Espionage at National Laboratories.
    U.S. Dept. of Energy Secretary Bill Richardson discusses the allegations of Chinese espionage at U.S. nuclear laboratories. He focuses on the dismissal of an employee at the Los Alamos lab due to security breaches potentially compromising nuclear weapons codes and stresses that this dismissal would not affect any other Asian-American employees in the lab. After his prepared remarks he took questions from the audience. Recorded 4/30/99 in New York City. 45 min. Video/C 6931
    American Chinatown.
    Focuses on the last rural Chinatown in the U.S., Locke, California. Documents the struggle between preservationists and developers. 30 min. Video/C 432
    Ancestors in the Americas: Chinese in the Frontier West, an American Story.
    A film by Loni Ding. Chronicles the arrival of the Chinese during the 1850s to 1880s in California during the Gold Rush period and their subsequent settlement in the Western states of Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming and South Dakota. Includes the history of their labor, community building and activism for justice and equality in the courts of mid-19th century America. 1998. 60 min. Video/C 5573
    Ancestors in the Americas: Coolies, Sailors, Settlers
  • 34. Ethnic Communities
    “Guardian of the Western Gate,” 1998; Committee of 100. “American Attitudes Toward chinese americans asian americans,” 2001.
    http://www.capaa.wa.gov/chineseamericans.html
    Chinese Americans
    By: Ryan Minato, Research Analyst Early Immigration

    The Chinese were the first Asians to migrate in significant numbers to Washington State where labor contractors aggressively recruited them for mining in the 1860s and salmon canneries, logging camps, and railroad construction in the 1870s. Chinese laborers made up two-thirds of the mining workforce; one-fourth of the cannery workers; and two-thirds of the railroad crew, building almost every major rail connection in Washington before 1900. The number of Chinese laborers declined in the early twentieth century due to the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, which was the first law that prohibited immigration on the basis of nationality. Exclusion Era
    As a result of prejudice and competition for jobs, the Chinese were increasingly restricted by exclusionary laws. For example, in 1854, the Chinese were denied the right to testify in court against Whites, resulting in Whites robbing, killing and assaulting the Chinese with impunity. In 1882, the Chinese Exclusion Act prohibited immigration from China and set the stage for many other nationality-based exclusion laws. Chinese women were especially targeted for exclusion in order to control the Chinese population in the U.S. and keep the laborers single and mobile. By 1890, the ratio of men to women was 27 to one, truncating the natural development of the Chinese community.

    35. Linking The Past To Present: Asian Americans Then And Now
    The grouping of asian americans together, then, makes sense in light of The chinese Must Go movement was so strong that chinese immigration to the US
    http://www.askasia.org/frclasrm/readings/r000192.htm
    Linking the Past to Present: Asian Americans Then and Now
    • Click Here for Related Lesson, The Asian American Experience Our children should not be placed in any position where their youthful impressions may be affected by association with pupils of thc Mongolian race.
      San Francisco School Board, l905
      In response to the challenge of changing demographics more than a century ago, the San Francisco School Board established a segregated Chinese Primary School for Chinese children to attend, including those who were American-born. By the turn-of-the century after Japanese immigrants had settled in the wake of Chinese exclusion, the School Board also applied the Chinese segregation policy to Japanese students. School superintendent, Aaron Altmann, advised the city's principals: "Any child that may apply for enrollment or at present attends your school who may be designated under the head of 'Mongolian' must be excluded, and in furtherance of this please direct them to apply at the Chinese School for enrollment." Throughout their history, Asian Americans have confronted a long legacy of exclusion and inequity in relation to school policies and practices, particularly during periods of changing demographics, economic recession, or war. In spite of historic, linguistic differences, distinct Asian nationalities have been grouped together and treated similarly in schools and in the larger society. The grouping of Asian Americans together, then, makes sense in light of historic links from the past to the present.

    36. Asian American Studies Resources
    PhilippineAmerican War; Media Action Network for asian americans MANAA American Attitudes Toward chinese-americans asian-americans - Full Report
    http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~dtsang/aas2.htm
    Asian American Studies Resources
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    General Resources
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    Bibliographies
    Return to Contents
    Magazines, Journals, Newsletters

    37. American Attitudes Towards Chinese Americans And Asian Americans
    American Attitudes towards chinese americans and asian americans. 25% americans Reflect Strong Negative Attitudes and Stereotypes americans Uncomfortable
    http://www.adl.org/misc/american_attitudes_towards_chinese.asp
    April 25, 2001 American Attitudes towards Chinese Americans and Asian Americans
    25% Americans Reflect Strong Negative Attitudes and Stereotypes Americans Uncomfortable with Asian American as US President or in inter-marriage The Committee of 100 today announced the results of the first of its kind survey on American attitudes towards Chinese Americans and Asian Americans. The study was conducted by Yankelovich Partners in collaboration and consultation with The Marttila Communications Group and the Anti-Defamation League. Founded in 1989, the Committee of 100 is an organization of prominent Chinese Americans with a two-fold mission: encouraging the full participation of Chinese Americans in U.S. society, and improving relations between the U.S. and China. Findings included:
    • A significant minority, 25%, of Americans indicated strong negative attitudes and stereotypes towards Chinese Americans. 23% of Americans are uncomfortable voting for an Asian American to be President of the United States. This is in contrast to 15% compared with an African American candidate, 14% compared with a woman candidate and 11% compared with a Jewish candidate.

    38. Asian American Heritage
    This page presents ten notable asian americans who have contributed to In physics lab, the chinese American teen built an instrument to measure gravity.
    http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/asian-american/notables.htm
    Scholastic Home About Us Site Map Search ... Michelle Kwan Asian Americans Who Have Made a Difference Duke Kahanamoku (Photo Corbis) King of the Waves
    Duke Kahanamoku came to be known as the father of international surfing, but the Hawaiian native made his first splash as a swimmer at the 1912 Olympics in Stockholm, Sweden. Born in Honolulu in 1890, Kahanamoku struck gold by setting a world record in the 100-meter free-style and earned a silver medal in the 200-meter relay. He won two more golds at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics, a silver at the 1924 Paris Olympics, and a bronze at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics. Kahanamoku's swimming and surfing talents caught the attention of Hollywood, and over the course of nine years, he appeared in nearly 30 movies. Kahanamoku went on to serve as sheriff for the City and County of Honolulu for 26 years. When the legendary swimmer and surfer died at the age of 77, he was remembered for his athletic talent and sportsmanship. To find our more about Duke Kahanamoku, go to the Outrigger Duke Kahanamoku Foundation Return to top A True Lifesaver
    Dr. Feng Shan Ho single-handedly saved thousands of Austrian Jews during the Holocaust. When Dr. Ho arrived in Vienna in 1937 as a Chinese diplomat, Austria had the third largest Jewish community in Europe. Just one year later, however, the Nazis took over Austria and began persecuting Jews. Although they tried to flee, Austrian Jews had nowhere to go because most of the world's nations would not accept Jewish refugees. Against all odds, many would survive thanks to Dr. Ho. As Chinese General Consul in Vienna, he went against his boss' orders and began issuing Jews visas to Shanghai, China. These lifesaving documents allowed thousands of Jews to leave Austria and escape death. After 40 years of diplomatic service that included ambassadorships to Egypt, Mexico, Bolivia, and Colombia, Dr. Ho retired to San Francisco, California. At age 89, he published his memoirs, "Forty Years of My Diplomatic Life." Dr. Ho died in 1997, an unknown hero of World War II.

    39. Smoking And Asian Americans/Pacific Islanders Fact Sheet - American Lung Associa
    For more information on asian americans/Pacific Islanders and Tobacco, Yu E, Chen E, Kim K and Abdulrahim S. Smoking Among chinese americans Behavior,
    http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=36001

    40. History Of Asian Americans
    An annotated list of resources on the history of asian americans, including those of chinese, Japanese, Korean, asian Indian, Vietnamese ancestry.
    http://newton.uor.edu/Departments&Programs/AsianStudiesDept/asianam-history.html
    History of Asian Americans General Chinese Japanese (General)
    Note: Resources on Japanese Internment on separate page Koreans Vietnamese Filipinos General Agricultural Laborers in California, ca. 1906-1911 - Photographs From UC Berkeley's Bancroft Library: "101 photographic prints ... document[ing] various ethnic groups, many of them agricultural workers, present in California in the early twentieth century. Especially featured in the collection are Japanese farm laborers and scenes of urban Chinese communities" Ancestors in the Americas Companion site for Loni Ding's PBS series on the history of Asian Americans: timeline; online discussion; resources; program information; individual stories Chronology of Asian American History Based on Sucheng Chan's Asian Americans, an Interpretive History Columbia River Basin Ethnic History Archives Historical Census Statistics on the Foreign-born Population of the United States: 1850-1990 Report from Population Division, U.S. Bureau of the Census

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