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The Changs Next Door to the Diazes - Remapping Race in Suburban California (Paperback)
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The Changs Next Door to the Diazes - Remapping Race in Suburban California (Paperback)
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U.S. suburbs are typically imagined to be predominantly white
communities, but this is increasingly untrue in many parts of the
country. Examining a multiracial suburb that is decidedly nonwhite,
Wendy Cheng unpacks questions of how identity-especially racial
identity-is shaped by place. She offers an in-depth portrait,
enriched by nearly seventy interviews, of the San Gabriel Valley,
not far from downtown Los Angeles, where approximately 60 percent
of residents are Asian American and more than 30 percent are
Latino. At first glance, the cities of the San Gabriel Valley look
like stereotypical suburbs, but almost no one who lives there is
white. The Changs Next Door to the Diazes reveals how a distinct
culture is being fashioned in, and simultaneously reshaping, an
environment of strip malls, multifamily housing, and faux
Mediterranean tract homes. Informed by her interviews as well as
extensive analysis of three episodic case studies, Cheng argues
that people's daily experiences-in neighborhoods, schools, civic
organizations, and public space-deeply influence their racial
consciousness. In the San Gabriel Valley, racial ideologies are
being reformulated by these encounters. Cheng views everyday
landscapes as crucial terrains through which racial hierarchies are
learned, instantiated, and transformed. She terms the process
"regional racial formation," through which locally accepted racial
orders and hierarchies complicate and often challenge prevailing
notions of race. There is a place-specific state of mind here,
Cheng finds. Understanding the processes of racial formation in the
San Gabriel Valley in the contemporary moment is important in
itself but also has larger value as a model for considering the
spatial dimensions of racial formation and the significant
demographic shifts taking place across the national landscape.
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