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Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home - Transnationalism and Migration Between the United States and South China, 1882-1943 (Paperback, 1 New Ed)
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Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home - Transnationalism and Migration Between the United States and South China, 1882-1943 (Paperback, 1 New Ed)
Series: Asian America
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book is a highly original study of transnationalism among
immigrants from Taishan, a populous coastal county in south China
from which, until 1965, the majority of Chinese in the United
States originated. Drawing creatively on Chinese-language sources
such as gazetteers, newspapers, and magazines, supplemented by
fieldwork and interviews as well as recent scholarship in Chinese
social history, the author presents a much richer depiction than we
have had heretofore of the continuing ties between Taishanese
remaining in China and their kinsmen seeking their fortune in "Gold
Mountain." Long after the gold in California ran out and prejudice
confined them to dismal Chinatowns, generations of Chinese-mostly
men from rural areas of southern China-continued to migrate to the
United States in hopes of bettering the family's lot by remitting
much of the meager sums they earned as laundrymen, cooks, domestic
workers, and Chinatown merchants. Economic hardships and U.S.
Exclusion laws extended the immigrants' separation from their
families for decades, "sojourns" that in many cases ended only in
death. Men lived as bachelors and their wives as widows, parents
passed away, and children grew up without ever seeing their
fathers' faces. Families and village communities had to adapt to
survive the stress of long-term, long-distance separation from
their primary wage-earners. At the same time, men raised in the
rural communities of a faltering imperial China had to negotiate
encounters with an industrializing, Western-dominated, often
hostile world. This history explores the resiliency and flexibility
of rural Chinese, qualities that enabled them to preserve their
families by living apart from them and to survive the intertwining
of their rural world with global systems of race, labor, and
capital. The author demonstrates that through migration to dank and
narrow enclaves, they came to live, and even to flourish, in a
transnational community that persisted despite decades of
separation and an ocean's width of distance.
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