



The Chinese Question: The Gold Rushes, Chinese Migration, and Global Politics
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4.0 • 3 Ratings
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
Winner of the 2022 Bancroft Prize
Shortlisted for the 2022 Cundill History Prize
Finalist for the 2022 Los Angeles Times Book Prize
How Chinese migration to the world’s goldfields upended global power and economics and forged modern conceptions of race.
In roughly five decades, between 1848 and 1899, more gold was removed from the earth than had been mined in the 3,000 preceding years, bringing untold wealth to individuals and nations. But friction between Chinese and white settlers on the goldfields of California, Australia, and South Africa catalyzed a global battle over “the Chinese Question”: would the United States and the British Empire outlaw Chinese immigration?
This distinguished history of the Chinese diaspora and global capitalism chronicles how a feverish alchemy of race and money brought Chinese people to the West and reshaped the nineteenth-century world. Drawing on ten years of research across five continents, prize-winning historian Mae Ngai narrates the story of the thousands of Chinese who left their homeland in pursuit of gold, and how they formed communities and organizations to help navigate their perilous new world. Out of their encounters with whites, and the emigrants’ assertion of autonomy and humanity, arose the pernicious western myth of the “coolie” laborer, a racist stereotype used to drive anti-Chinese sentiment.
By the turn of the twentieth century, the United States and the British Empire had answered “the Chinese Question” with laws that excluded Chinese people from immigration and citizenship. Ngai explains how this happened and argues that Chinese exclusion was not extraneous to the emergent global economy but an integral part of it. The Chinese Question masterfully links important themes in world history and economics, from Europe’s subjugation of China to the rise of the international gold standard and the invention of racist, anti-Chinese stereotypes that persist to this day.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Ngai (Impossible Subjects), a professor of Asian American studies at Columbia University, delivers a painstaking study of Chinese immigration to the U.S., Australia, and South Africa as gold rush fever swept the globe in the last half of the 19th century. Detailing increasingly labor-intensive mining practices, policies of exclusion and racial segregation, and the entrenchment of the "racist coolie stereotype," Ngai contends that "Chinese emigrants suffered marginalization, violence and discrimination but they also adapted and persevered." Extensive archival work reveals the earnings, possessions, and sometimes tragic fates of the hundreds of thousands of Chinese men who left home to pursue their fortunes. The wave of migration forced imperial China to engage with the world to a degree it had not done in the modern era, combating exclusionary laws that lasted until WWII in the U.S., and well into the 1970s in Australia and South Africa. Descriptions of the Zongli Yamen, the Qing government's foreign office, offer an intriguing, rarely seen perspective on the diaspora and China's response to humiliating global bigotry, which fueled a sense of grievance still evident in the country's nationalistic rhetoric. Though dense and scholarly, this impressive volume adds a vital chapter in the history of globalization.