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5. Chinese and American Collaborations through Educational Exchange during the Era of Exclusion, 1872–1955
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Preface ix
- Introduction: Integrating the Pacific 1
-
Part I. China and Ocean Worlds
- 1. A Very Long Early Modern? Asia and Its Oceans, 1000–1850 15
- 2. Transatlantic and Transpacific Connections in Early American History 29
-
Part II. Circuits and Diaspora
- 3. The Pacific Ocean as Highway to Gold Mountain: The Hong Kong Connection, 1850–1900 47
- 4. Pop Gingle’s Cold War 62
- 5. Chinese and American Collaborations through Educational Exchange during the Era of Exclusion, 1872–1955 80
- 6. Japanese Reinvention of Self through Hawai‘i’s Japanese Americans 96
- 7. Fighting the Postwar in Little Saigon 110
-
Part III. Racism and Imperialism
- 8. Transpacific Accommodation and the Defense of Asian Immigrants 129
- 9. Kilsoo Haan, American Intelligence, and the Anticipated Japanese Invasion of California, 1931–1943 146
- 10. Transpacific Adoption: The Korean War, US Missionaries, and Cold War Liberalism 161
- 11. Inter-Imperial Relations, the Pacific, and Asian American History 178
- 12. Japanese Immigrant Settler Colonialism and the Construction of a US National Security Regime against the Transborder “Yellow Peril” 192
-
Part IV. Islands and the Pacific Rim
- 13. How the Portuguese Became White: The Racial Politics of Pre-Annexation Hawai‘i 213
- 14. Who Closed the Sea? Archipelagoes of Amnesia between the United States and Japan 229
- 15. Japanese Commemorations of World War II in the Mariana Islands 247
- Contributors 265
- Index 269
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS vii
- Preface ix
- Introduction: Integrating the Pacific 1
-
Part I. China and Ocean Worlds
- 1. A Very Long Early Modern? Asia and Its Oceans, 1000–1850 15
- 2. Transatlantic and Transpacific Connections in Early American History 29
-
Part II. Circuits and Diaspora
- 3. The Pacific Ocean as Highway to Gold Mountain: The Hong Kong Connection, 1850–1900 47
- 4. Pop Gingle’s Cold War 62
- 5. Chinese and American Collaborations through Educational Exchange during the Era of Exclusion, 1872–1955 80
- 6. Japanese Reinvention of Self through Hawai‘i’s Japanese Americans 96
- 7. Fighting the Postwar in Little Saigon 110
-
Part III. Racism and Imperialism
- 8. Transpacific Accommodation and the Defense of Asian Immigrants 129
- 9. Kilsoo Haan, American Intelligence, and the Anticipated Japanese Invasion of California, 1931–1943 146
- 10. Transpacific Adoption: The Korean War, US Missionaries, and Cold War Liberalism 161
- 11. Inter-Imperial Relations, the Pacific, and Asian American History 178
- 12. Japanese Immigrant Settler Colonialism and the Construction of a US National Security Regime against the Transborder “Yellow Peril” 192
-
Part IV. Islands and the Pacific Rim
- 13. How the Portuguese Became White: The Racial Politics of Pre-Annexation Hawai‘i 213
- 14. Who Closed the Sea? Archipelagoes of Amnesia between the United States and Japan 229
- 15. Japanese Commemorations of World War II in the Mariana Islands 247
- Contributors 265
- Index 269