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24. Linked Lives: Korean American Daughters and Their Aging Immigrant Parents

  • Barbara W. Kim and Grace J. Yoo
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Our Voices, Our Histories
This chapter is in the book Our Voices, Our Histories
© 2020 New York University Press, New York, USA

© 2020 New York University Press, New York, USA

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Introduction: Our Voices 1
  4. Introduction: Our Histories 8
  5. Part I: Early Era, Indigenous and Global Roots
  6. 1. Mālamalama: Reconnecting as Native Hawaiian Women through Cultural History 17
  7. 2. Global Roots and Gendered Routes: Early Asian American Women’s History 37
  8. 3. Two Sisters, Two Stories: Transnational Lives of Ume Tsuda and Yona Abiko 53
  9. Part II: New Intersections of Race, Gender, Generation, Communities
  10. 4. “Up to My Elbows in Rice!”: Women Building Communities and Sustaining Families in Pre- 1965 Filipina/o America 69
  11. 5. Stretching the Boundaries of Christian Respectability, Race, and Gender during Jim Crow: Chinese American Women and the Southern Baptist Church 87
  12. 6. Stepping Onstage and Breaking Ground: Asian American Dancers Complicate Race and Gender Stereotypes, 1930s– 1960s 106
  13. Part III: New Cultural Formations, New Selves
  14. 7. “She Speaks Well”: Language as Performance of Japanese American Femininity and Social Mobility in Postwar Hawaiʻi 123
  15. 8. History, Identity, and the Life Course: Mixed Race Asian American Women 140
  16. 9. Ancestral Ethics and Sāmoanness: Explaining the Contemporary Sāmoan American Women 155
  17. Part IV: Wartimes and Aftermath 171
  18. 10. Memories of Mass Incarceration: Mobilizing Japanese American Women for Redress and Beyond 171
  19. 11. Refugee Lifemaking Practices: Southeast Asian Women 189
  20. 12. “Defiant Daughters”: The Resilience and Resistance of 1.5- Generation Vietnamese American Women 205
  21. Part V: Globalization, Work, Family, Community, Activism
  22. 13. Precarious Labor: Asian Immigrant Women, 1970s– 2010s 221
  23. 14. The Backbone of New York City’s Chinatown: Chinese Women and the Garment Industry, 1950– 2009 238
  24. 15. Women’s Agency and Cost in Migration: Taiwanese American Transnational Families 254
  25. 16. “Revolutionary Care” as Activism: Filipina Nurses and Care Workers in Chicago, 1965– 2016 269
  26. Part VI: Spaces of Political Struggles
  27. 17. The Mother’s Tongue: Language, Women, and the Chamorros of Guam 285
  28. 18. Asian American Feminisms and Legislative Activism: Patsy Takemoto Mink in the US Congress 304
  29. 19. Opening the Path to Marriage Equality: Asian American Lesbians Reach Out to Their Families and Communities 321
  30. 20. Turning Points: South Asian Feminist Responses to Gender- Based Violence and Immigration Enforcement 338
  31. Part VII: New Diasporas, Diverse Lives, Evolving Identities
  32. 21. Locating Adoptees in Asian America: Jane Jeong Trenka and Deann Borshay Liem 355
  33. 22. “Let Them Attack Me for Wearing the Hijab”: Islam and Identity in the Lives of Bangladeshi American Women 373
  34. 23. Navigating the Hyphen: Tongan- American Women in Academia 388
  35. Part VIII: Gender, Cultural Change, Intergenerational Dynamics
  36. 24. Linked Lives: Korean American Daughters and Their Aging Immigrant Parents 405
  37. 25. Negotiating Cultural Change: Professional Hmong American Women 423
  38. 26. Stories and Visions across Generations: Khmer American Women 439
  39. Reflections 457
  40. Acknowledgments 465
  41. About the Contributors 467
  42. Index 475
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