Libros > The Color of Success (Ebook)
Portada de The Color of Success (ebook)

The Color of Success (ebook)

Autor:Ellen D. Wu;
Categoría:
ISBN: EB9781400848874
Princeton University Press nos ofrece The Color of Success (ebook) en inglés, disponible en nuestra tienda desde el 24 de Noviembre del 2013.
Leer argumento »
Ver todas las novedades de libros »

Argumento de The Color of Success (ebook)

"The Color of Success provides an insightful account of not just race relations, but race making. . . . It is a remarkable illustration of how ethnic stereotypes have less to do with any innate racial or biological reality, and everything to do with the political dynamics of the societies in which we live."--Christina Ho, Australian Review of Public Affairs

"Wu's research is thorough: her list of news¬papers consulted is mind-boggling, she has read every book and article that matters and worked her way through a multitude of archives. Her argument is complex and has the ring of truth. Her prose is clear and graceful. The book is not really about Asian Americans; it is about Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans. But seldom has a scholar gone so deeply into two different ethnic communities and emerged with such subtle and far-reaching results. The Color of Success is a major intervention in American racial history."--Paul Spickard, Journal of American History

Winner of the 2016 AAAS Award for Best Book in History, Association for Asian American Studies
Winner of the 2014 Best First Book, Immigration and Ethnic History Society
Finalist for the 2015 Theodore Saloutos Memorial Book Award, Immigration and Ethnic History Society

"Wus research is thorough: her list of newspapers consulted is mind-boggling, she has read every book and article that matters and worked her way through a multitude of archives. Her argument is complex and has the ring of truth. Her prose is clear and graceful. . . . [S]eldom has a scholar gone so deeply into two different ethnic communities and emerged with such subtle and far-reaching results. The Color of Success is a major intervention in American racial history."--Paul Spickard, Journal of American History

"The Color of Success embodies exciting developments in Asian American history. Through the lens of racial liberalism and cultural diplomacy, Ellen Wu offers a historically grounded analysis of the Asian American model minority in the contexts of domestic race politics and geopolitics, and she unveils the complexities of wartime and postwar national inclusion."--Eiichiro Azuma, University of Pennsylvania

"Tracing the history of Japanese and Chinese American racialization, this powerful and effective book illuminates the impact of war, international relations, and domestic politics through richly detailed narratives. Ellen Wu shows that the idea of Asians as the model minority began as an academic hypothesis and became a key feature for how race in the United States was conceptualized. This is an important work."--Mary L. Dudziak, author of War Time: An Idea, Its History, Its Consequences

"The Asian American journey provides a crucial angle of vision for a nation whose understanding of its own history tends toward color-blind denials or the white-black binary. Through this lens, Ellen Wu has written an important analysis of mid-twentieth-century struggle and racial liberalism. The Color of Success is an illuminating and deeply researched book--its intellectual ambition reaches to the heart of U.S. political culture."--Matthew Jacobson, Yale University

"With rich archival detail and illustrative accounts, The Color of Success offers a distinct and important contribution to the vexing question of the model minority formation of Asian Americans in the middle of the twentieth century. The book has widespread relevance to comparative race relations, the politics of acculturation, the conspicuous limits of middle-class Americanism, as well as national loyalty and race neutrality."--Nayan Shah, University of Southern California

"Ellen D. Wu has produced a masterful work in The Color of Success that very well may prove to be the definitive study of the historical origins of the model minority stereotype of Asian Americans."--Jonathan Y. Okamura, Patterns of Prejudice

"Historian Wu sets the record straight, offering the manner in which Asians worked to overcome prejudice from the 1890s through more recent events, including WWII, the communist revolution in China, and the Korean and Vietnamese wars."--Choice0Acknowledgments xi
Introduction Imperatives of Asian American Citizenship 1
Part I War and the Assimilating Other 11
Chapter 1 Leave Your Zoot Suits Behind 16
Chapter 2 How American Are We? 43
Chapter 3 Nisei in Uniform 72
Chapter 4 America's Chinese 111
Part II Definitively Not-Black 145
Chapter 5 Success Story, Japanese American Style 150
Chapter 6 Chinatown Offers Us a Lesson 181
Chapter 7 The Melting Pot of the Pacific 210
Epilogue Model Minority/Asian American 242
Notes 259
Archival, Primary, and Unpublished Sources 333
Index 341

Ultimacomic es una marca registrada por Ultimagame S.L - Ultimacomic.com y Ultimagame.com pertenecen a la empresa Ultimagame S.L - Datos Fiscales: B92641216 - Datos de Inscripción Registral: Inscrita en el Registro Mercantíl de Málaga, TOMO: 3815. LIBRO: 2726. FOLIO: 180. HOJA: MA-77524.
2003 - 2019, COPYRIGHT ULTIMAGAME S.L. - Leer esta página significa estar deacuerdo con la Política de privacidad y de uso