Buch
Coping with Discrimination and Exclusion
-Experiences of Free Chinese Migrants in the Americas in a Transregional and Diachronic Perspective-Albert Manke
Übersicht
Verlag | : | WVT Wissenschaftlicher Verlag Trier |
Buchreihe | : | Inter-American Studies / Estudios Interamericanos (Bd. 32) |
Sprache | : | Englisch |
Erschienen | : | 30. 03. 2021 |
Seiten | : | 162 |
Einband | : | Kartoniert |
Höhe | : | 210 mm |
Breite | : | 148 mm |
Gewicht | : | 316 g |
ISBN | : | 9783868218299 |
Sprache | : | Englisch |
Produktinformation
This essay takes an Inter-American and transpacific look at historical processes of discrimination and exclusion of migrants in the Americas and in the Spanish colonial Philippines that were based on racist and xenophobic prejudices. It will focus on pertinent migration policies and conjunctures of negotiation in various societies of the Americas while highlighting discriminatory dynamics in their diachronic dimension. Because Chinese immigrants were the first to experience these exclusionary practices and policies, the focus will be on this group in particular, keeping in mind that these dynamics affected other groups as well. By highlighting the correlation between mobility, liberalism, and ethnicity or ethnic adscription, the aim is to get a better understanding of the conjunctures of discrimination that immigrants who are considered ‘non-white’ suffered and continue to suffer from today in what we might term the Asian century.
Contents
Introduction .................................................................................. 1
1. Migration, Exclusion, and Strategies of Resistance ............. 6
2. The Period of the Manila Galleon:
Chinese and Spaniards in the Philippines ............................. 11
2.1. The Philippines as an Axis of Global Trade
and Space of Conflict, Sixteenth
and Seventeenth Centuries ........................................... 16
2.2. Transpacific Asian Migration
to Continental New Spain ............................................ 25
2.3. The Philippines of the Eighteenth Century:
Consolidation, Miscegenation and
the Regulation of Migration ......................................... 27
3. Forced Migration and Voluntary Migration
in the Modern Age ................................................................ 35
3.1. From the Age of Revolution
to the Great Migrations ................................................ 35
3.2. The Coolie Trade – an Intermediate Step
toward Voluntary Labor? ............................................. 38
3.3. What is Free Migration? .............................................. 46
3.4. Asian Immigration as a Part of the Free Migration
to the Americas ............................................................ 50
4. Free Migration of Chinese to the United States ................... 53
4.1. In Search of the Gold Mountain .................................. 53
4.2. The First Phase of Discrimination
of Chinese Immigrants (1848–c. 1865) ....................... 61
4.3. Building the Transcontinental Railroad and
a Time of Hope during the Reconstruction Era ........... 77
4.4. The 1870s: A Time of Change ..................................... 87
5. Inter-American Entanglements: Spreading Xenophobia? .... 95
5.1. Transregional Exclusion: USA and Latin America ..... 95
5.2. Transpacific Cooperation between Asia and
Latin America and Resistance
in the Late Nineteenth Century .................................... 101
5.3. Circular Migration and Transnational Networks ......... 104
5.4. Hegemonic Power and the Proliferation of Policies
of Exclusion in the Americas ....................................... 105
Conclusions .................................................................................. 115
Works Cited ................................................................................. 121
Pressestimmen
Impressive in scope and breadth, “Coping with Discrimination and Exclusion” employs a comparative and transnational approach to highlight patterns of controlling Chinese labor and mobility and repeated attempts to limit the entry of free laborers across the Pacific Rim. At the same time, it elegantly captures the goals and aspirations of Chinese migrants who organized against nationality-based exclusion. Incorporating the Philippines, North America, and Latin America, Mankeʼs study encourages us to think about larger racial structures along with local variations.
Fredy González, Associate Professor of Global Asian Studies, University of Illinois at Chicago