Illegal Immigrants/model Minorities

Illegal Immigrants/model Minorities The Cold War of Chinese American Narrative - Asian American History and Culture

Hardback (12 Feb 2021)

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Publisher's Synopsis

In the Cold War era, Chinese Americans were caught in a double-bind. The widespread stigma of illegal immigration, as it was often called, was most easily countered with the model minority, assimilating and forming nuclear families, but that in turn led to further stereotypes. In Illegal Immigrants/Model Minorities, Heidi Kim investigates how Chinese American writers navigated a strategy to normalize and justify the Chinese presence during a time when fears of Communism ran high.

Kim explores how writers like Maxine Hong Kingston, Jade Snow Wong, and C. Y. Lee, among others, addressed issues of history, family, blood purity, and law through then-groundbreaking novels and memoirs. Illegal Immigrants/Model Minorities also uses legal cases, immigration documents, and law as well as mass media coverage to illustrate how writers constructed stories in relation to the political structures that allowed or disallowed their presence, their citizenship, and their blended identity. 

Kim illuminates the rapidly shifting political and social pressures on Chinese American authors who selectively concealed, revealed, and reconstructed issues of citizenship, belonging, and inclusion in their writing.

Book information

ISBN: 9781439919019
Publisher: Temple University Press
Imprint: Temple University Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 973.0495
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: viii, 229
Weight: 614g
Height: 156mm
Width: 237mm
Spine width: 20mm