224 pages, 6 x 9
3 maps
Hardcover
Release Date:30 Jun 2013
ISBN:9780824836429
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Transpacific Articulations

Student Migration and the Remaking of Asian America

University of Hawaii Press

In 1854 Yung Wing, who graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Yale University, returned to a poverty-stricken China, where domestic revolt and foreign invasion were shaking the Chinese empire. Inspired by the U.S. and its liberal education, Yung believed that having more Chinese students educated there was the only way to bring reform to China. Since then, generations of students from China—and other Asian countries—have embarked on this transpacific voyage in search of modernity. What forces have shaped Asian student migration to the U.S.? What impact do foreign students have on the formation of Asian America? How do we grasp the meaning of this transpacific subject in and out of Asian American history and culture? Transpacific Articulations explores these questions in the crossings of Asian culture and American history.

Beginning with the story of Yung Wing, the book is organized chronologically to show the transpacific character of Asian student migration. The author examines Chinese students’ writings in English and Chinese, maintaining that so-called “overseas student literature” represents both an imaginary passage to modernity and a transnational culture where meanings of Asian America are rearticulated through Chinese. He also demonstrates that Chinese student political activities in the U.S. in the late 1960s and 1970s—namely, the Baodiao movement that protested Japan’s takeover of the Diaoyutai Islands and the Taiwan independence movement—have important but less examined intersections with Asian America. In addition, the work offers a reflection on the development of Asian American studies in Asia to suggest the continuing significance of knowledge and movement in the formation of Asian America.

Transpacific Articulations provides a doubly engaged perspective formed in the nexus of Asian and American histories by taking the foreign student figure seriously. It will not only speak to scholars of Asian American studies, Asian studies, and transnational cultural studies, but also to general readers who are interested in issues of modernity, diaspora, identity, and cultural politics in China and Taiwan.

Wang argues that becoming Asian American is not a one-way street, nor even a two-way street, but a messy triangulation among ‘Asia,’ ‘America,’ and the conditions of U.S. power and involvement in Asia, particularly during the long Cold War era. . . . Transpacific Articulations is a notable work that itself constitutes a bridge between Asian American studies and Sinophone/Asia studies. It argues convincingly that the experiences, perspectives, and diasporic activism of Chinese student migrants have indeed constituted a ‘missing chapter’ in Asian American studies. Journal of Asian American Studies, 17:3 (October 2014)
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