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Taking it to the streets: Representations of ethnicity and gender in San Francisco's Chinese New Year festivals, 1953--2001 (California).

机译:上街:1953--2001年(加利福尼亚州)旧金山农历新年节中的种族和性别表征。

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摘要

The major objectives of this dissertation are to demonstrate how Chinese Americans created and contested Chinese Americans' identity through San Francisco's Chinese New Year Festivals and to understand the complex entanglement of ethnicity, class, gender, and national and transnational politics and economics as they shaped identity formation. Whereas much contemporary Chinese American history focuses on either the pre-1943 or the post-1965 periods and is concerned with the important work of recovering Chinese Americans' social history, this project attempts to build upon as well as reshape the debate over identity formation within the Chinese American community by studying Chinese American cultural history from the early Cold War period to the present. This study argues that ethnic cultural celebrations and beauty pageants are an important avenue for understanding Chinese American experiences. This dissertation examines festival publications, brochures, pamphlets, newspapers, oral histories, autobiographies, and government records to analyze the process of Chinese American identify formation and identity politics. The central analysis focuses on how some Chinese American leaders, student activists, gang members, feminists, and new and old immigrants actively constructed their ethnicities through selecting certain cultural attributes, experiences, and memories to represent themselves and the Chinese American community. It emphasizes the tensions and conflicts that resulted from the very process of ethnic identification and exclusion---a process in which diverse constituencies of the Chinese American community expressed different visions of themselves. By examining the changing power relations in the festivals, this study demonstrates the complex class and gender structures in the San Francisco's Chinese American community and the impact of national and transnational political, economic, and social forces on that community. It also shows how a Chinese diaspora asserted its own power culturally, politically, and economically as an ethnic constituency in a major U.S. urban city.
机译:本论文的主要目的是通过旧金山的农历新年节来展示华裔美国人如何创造和挑战华裔美国人的身份,并了解种族,阶级,性别,民族和跨国政治与经济在塑造身份过程中的复杂纠缠。编队。尽管许多当代华裔美国人的历史集中在1943年之前或1965年后时期,并且关注恢复华裔美国人社会历史的重要工作,但该项目试图建立并重塑关于美国公民身份形成的辩论。通过研究从冷战初期到现在的华裔美国人的文化历史来研究华裔美国人。这项研究认为,种族文化庆典和选美大赛是了解美国华裔经历的重要途径。本文研究了节日出版物,小册子,小册子,报纸,口述历史,自传和政府记录,以分析华裔美国人认同形成和身份政治的过程。中心分析的重点是一些华裔美国领导人,学生活动家,帮派成员,女权主义者以及新老移民如何通过选择代表自己和华裔社区的某些文化属性,经验和记忆来积极地建立自己的种族。它强调了族裔认同和排斥这一过程所造成的紧张和冲突,在这一过程中,华裔美国人社区的不同支持者表达了对自己的不同看法。通过研究节日中不断变化的权力关系,本研究证明了旧金山华裔社区的复杂阶级和性别结构,以及国家和跨国政治,经济和社会力量对该社区的影响。它还显示了中国侨民如何在文化,政治和经济上坚持自己的权力,作为美国主要城市的族裔选民。

著录项

  • 作者

    Yeh, Chiou-ling.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Irvine.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Irvine.;
  • 学科 History United States.; Anthropology Cultural.; Sociology Ethnic and Racial Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2001
  • 页码 246 p.
  • 总页数 246
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类 美洲史;人类学;民族学;
  • 关键词

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