首页> 外文学位 >Uncertain citizenship: Race, empire, and the denationalization of Asian Americans in twentieth-century United States.
【24h】

Uncertain citizenship: Race, empire, and the denationalization of Asian Americans in twentieth-century United States.

机译:不确定的公民身份:20世纪美国的种族,帝国和亚裔美国人的去民族化。

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例

摘要

While scholarship on immigration and Asian American history has frequently focused on the relationship between immigration and naturalization restrictions and the actions of people who were subjected to them, this body of work has generally assumed US citizenship to be a stable legal category once it is attained and has ignored the possibility of citizenship loss for Asian Americans. "Uncertain Citizenship" intervenes in this scholarship by providing a social, legal, and cultural history of cases where US citizens of Asian descent were legally divested of their US citizenship through administrative procedures of denaturalization and expatriation. Through an analysis of legal proceedings, government correspondence, and other archival materials uncovered in the archives of the Department of Justice and the Department of State, this project uncovers the as-yet untold stories of Indian Americans who were denaturalized in the early twentieth century for not being white, and Japanese Americans who were expatriated after World War II for voting in Japanese elections, serving in the Japanese armed forces, or taking up employment with the Japanese government. These cases, which comprise the most systematic and targeted instances of denationalization in US history, demonstrate how transnational constructions of race and empire were vital to the development of norms of US citizenship. In addition, this dissertation argues that the threat of citizenship loss also served as a disciplinary mechanism that policed certain citizen behaviors such as split national identities or participation in subversive or "deviant" acts. It served as a potent reminder to citizens that failure to adhere to citizenship norms could get them expelled from national membership and made it clear to Asian immigrants that their acceptance into the nation was precarious and conditional at best. By placing citizenship loss in a transnational context, this project makes significant contributions towards understanding the impact that the transnational movements of peoples and ideas has had on the development of the American nation, state, empire, and concept of citizenship.
机译:虽然有关移民和亚裔美国人历史的奖学金经常侧重于移民和归化限制与受其约束的人们的行为之间的关系,但这一工作总体上将美国公民身份定为获得稳定和稳定的法律类别。忽视了亚裔美国人丧失公民身份的可能性。 “不确定的公民身份”通过提供有关社会,法律和文化历史的案例来干预这项奖学金,这些案例涉及通过变性和移居国外的行政程序合法剥夺亚裔美国公民的美国国籍的案件。通过对司法部和国务院档案中发现的法律诉讼,政府书信和其他档案资料的分析,该项目揭示了20世纪初因种族歧视而沦为印第安人的印度人至今尚未讲的故事。不是白人,还有在第二次世界大战后因在日本大选中投票,在日本武装部队中服役或在日本政府工作而被遣散的日裔美国人。这些案例构成了美国历史上最系统,最有针对性的去国有化案例,证明了种族和帝国的跨国建设对美国公民规范的发展至关重要。此外,本文认为,丧失公民身份的威胁也可以作为一种纪律机制,对某些公民行为进行监督,例如分裂的民族身份或参与颠覆性或“背叛”行为。它向公民发出了强烈的提醒,即不遵守公民身份准则可能会使他们被驱逐出国籍,并向亚洲移民表明,他们进入该国充其量是危险的,而且是有条件的。通过将公民身份丧失置于跨国背景下,该项目为理解跨国民族和思想的跨国运动对美国民族,国家,帝国和公民观念的发展做出了重要贡献。

著录项

  • 作者

    Agarwal, Kritika.;

  • 作者单位

    State University of New York at Buffalo.;

  • 授予单位 State University of New York at Buffalo.;
  • 学科 Asian American studies.;Ethnic studies.;American history.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 280 p.
  • 总页数 280
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号