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Forever Foreigners or Honorary Whites? - The Asian Ethnic Experience Today (Paperback)
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Forever Foreigners or Honorary Whites? - The Asian Ethnic Experience Today (Paperback)
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"Tuan's book is a major contribution to Asian American studies
because she lets her respondents speak. . . . Her thesis is clear:
that no matter where Asian Americans go they cannot hide from their
race and ethnicity. In addition, Tuan provides a picture to how a
pan-ethnic Asian American cultural experience emerges not from a
common cultural tradition, but through a common experience of
racialization. Tuan's book is essential reading for those that
conduct research and teach on the experiences of American born
Asians."-Journal of Asian American Studies "Forever Foreigners or
Honorary Whites? informs the reader of the racialized ethnic
experiences as felt and lived by third-plus-generation Chinese and
Japanese Americans and California. To question the plethora of
'ethnic options' for Asian Americans, Tuan opens the book with one
of the most alarming examples-the Ito D'Amato incident-that
blatantly denigrates Americans of Asian descent as 'foreigners.'. .
. the analytical contrast between modernizers and traditionalists
provides a consistent integrating theme that enhances the book's
usefulness in advanced undergraduate or graduate courses."-Social
Forces "Mia Tuan investigates the role of ethnicity in the lives of
later-generation Asian Americans. As the title suggests, the study
engages the debate over the applicability of the white ethnic
assimilation paradigm in addressing the experiences of racialized
ethnic minorities. Tuan concludes that Asian Americans can choose
the cultural practices and values they wish to maintain in their
private lives but cannot escape identification in ethnic and racial
terms when in public. . . . Tuan's study allows later-generation
Asian Americans to convey their experiences. Their stories and
opinions provide an understanding of the changes occurring in one
segment of contemporary Asian America."-Journal of American Ethnic
History "A compelling account of the ongoing acculturation of West
Coast Asian Americans and their continuing experience of racism.
Mia Tuan uses her sociological skills to paint a disturbing
portrait of the hidden and not-so-hidden injuries of race suffered
by Californians who have been here form many generations, as well
as an early warning of what the future might hold for some of our
newest immigrants." -Herbert Gans, Roberts S. Lynd Professor of
Sociology, Columbia University "This well-written book advances our
understanding of the changing and situational construction of
American and ethnic identities by exploring the ways in which
multigenerational Asian Americans constitute, express, and
transform their identities." -Yen Le Espiritu, author of Asian
American Women and Men: Labor, Laws, and Love What does it mean to
be an Asian American in the United States today? Are Asian
Americans considered "honorary whites" or forever thought of as
"foreigners?" Mia Tuan examines the salience and meaning of
ethnicity for later generation Chinese and Japanese Americans, and
asks how their concepts of ethnicity differ from that of white
ethnic Americans. She interviewed 95 middle-class Chinese and
Japanese Californians and analyzes the importance of ethnic
identities and the concept of becoming a "real" American for both
Asian and white ethnics. She asks her subjects about their . early
memories and experiences with Chinese/Japanese culture; . current
lifestyle and emerging cultural practices; . experiences with
racism and discrimination; and their . attitudes toward current
Asian immigration. Mia Tuan is an assistant professor of sociology
at the University of Oregon.
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