California Dreaming: Migration and Dependency (Reprint) California Dreaming: Migration and Dependency (Reprint)

California Dreaming: Migration and Dependency (Reprint‪)‬

Chinese America: History and Perspectives 2002, Annual

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

Editor's Note: This article is reprinted by permission of Stanford University Press from Dreaming of Gold, Dreaming of Home: Migration and Transnationalism between the United States and South China, 1882-1943 (2000). Until 1994, a large sign in front of Taishan City's main bus station greeted arrivals with the following words, "You Are Welcome to Tai Shan--The Home of Oversea [sic] Chinese." (1) This sign conveys an unusual message, for it implies that the people of Taishan identify their county not by those who live there, but by those who have gone away. It seems that Taishanese identity is predicated on absence, that Taishanese consider their most distinguishing characteristic to be the large numbers of people who have left Taishan. Despite initial impressions, however, the sign is not intended to be self-deprecating. Most of the visitors who actually see it are Taishanese returned from overseas. It has been erected to remind absentee sons and daughters of Taishan that their presence in that town square is much appreciated and that they can always consider Taishan their home, regardless of how long ago either they or their ancestors departed the place. In other words, the sign does not denigrate Taishan as a place worth leaving but emphasizes that it is a place worth returning to, especially for those with any sort of claim to being Taishanese.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2002
1 January
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
88
Pages
PUBLISHER
Chinese Historical Society
SIZE
299.7
KB

More Books by Chinese America: History and Perspectives

Stranded Scholar from China: The Life of Calvin H. Chen, MD. Stranded Scholar from China: The Life of Calvin H. Chen, MD.
2004
Nineteenth-Century Oakland Chinese Businesses (Methods IN HISTORICAL RESEARCH) Nineteenth-Century Oakland Chinese Businesses (Methods IN HISTORICAL RESEARCH)
2008
My Heart Is Open (Chinese Americans Travel to China to Explore Their Roots) (Travel Narrative) My Heart Is Open (Chinese Americans Travel to China to Explore Their Roots) (Travel Narrative)
2006
Breaking Racial Barriers: Wo Kee Company: A Collaboration Between a Chinese Immigrant and White American in Nineteenth-Century America (1) (Editorial) Breaking Racial Barriers: Wo Kee Company: A Collaboration Between a Chinese Immigrant and White American in Nineteenth-Century America (1) (Editorial)
2005
History of Meizhou Gongyi Tongmeng Zonghui (Unionist Guild of America) (Organization Overview) History of Meizhou Gongyi Tongmeng Zonghui (Unionist Guild of America) (Organization Overview)
2008
"My Race, Too, Is Queer" (1): Queer Mixed Heritage Chinese Americans Fight for Marriage Equality (2) (6D Paper) (Law Overview) "My Race, Too, Is Queer" (1): Queer Mixed Heritage Chinese Americans Fight for Marriage Equality (2) (6D Paper) (Law Overview)
2007