The Asian American movement [electronic resource] / William Wei.
1993
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Details
Title
The Asian American movement [electronic resource] / William Wei.
Published
Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 1993.
Description
1 online resource (xvi, 355 pages) : illustrations.
Series statement
Asian American history and culture
Summary
Largely unexamined until recently, the Asian American Movement has been active for more than two decades. William Wei traces to the late 1960s the initial genesis of an Asian American identity, culture, and activism through which members of this pan-Asian group could assert their right to belong to and be respected as responsible members of this society. Although its antecedents were the civil rights and Black Power movements, the Asian American Movement actually resulted from the protests against the Vietnam War and the emergence of a generation of college-aged Chinese and Japanese Americans. In this definitive study of the Asian American Movement, Wei fills an important gap in our knowledge of ethnic social movements and the struggle to achieve American cultural democracy. Lacking a nationally known leader but confronted by many shared issues and concerns, the Asian American Movement was essentially a middle-class reform effort to achieve racial equality, social justice, and political empowerment. It focused on ethnic solidarity and self-empowerment through political activism, educational and community development, and cultural expressions. While the Movement was most visible on the West Coast, notably at the Third World Strike at San Francisco State College in 1968, it became a vital force simultaneously on campuses and in Asian American communities throughout the country. Wei evaluates the Movement's effort to develop a unique but cohesive ethnic identity and the internal struggles between reformist and revolutionary approaches to social change. He analyzes the Asian American women's movement, the alternative press, Asian American studies programs, community-based organizations, and Maoist sects. His study concludes with an examination of Asian American involvement in electoral politics and the quest for political empowerment. Interviews with many of the key participants in the Movement and photographs of Asian American demonstrations and events enhance Wei's portrayal of the development and breadth of the Movement and the conflicts within it. Exploring regional differences; issues of ethnicity, class, and gender; and the transition from radical to electoral politics, Wei's comprehensive study is the first book to examine systematically the coming-to-consciousness and mobilization of Asian Americans.
Note
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Bibliography, etc.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-335) and index.
Contents
Origins of the movement
Who am I? creating an Asian American identity and culture
Race versus gender: the Asian American women's movement
Speaking out: the Asian American alternative press
Activists and the development of Asian American studies
"To serve the people": reformers and community-based organizations
The emergence and eclipse of Maoist organizations
From radical to electoral politics: the Asian American odyssey for empowerment.
Who am I? creating an Asian American identity and culture
Race versus gender: the Asian American women's movement
Speaking out: the Asian American alternative press
Activists and the development of Asian American studies
"To serve the people": reformers and community-based organizations
The emergence and eclipse of Maoist organizations
From radical to electoral politics: the Asian American odyssey for empowerment.
Reproduction
Electronic text and image data. Ann Arbor, Mich. : University of Michigan, Michigan Publishing, 2022. EPUB file. ([ACLS Humanities E-Book])
Copyright
All rights reserved.
Series
Asian American history and culture (Series)
ACLS Humanities E-Book (Series)
ACLS Humanities E-Book (Series)
Linked resources
Place of creation/publication
United States -- Pennsylvania.
Item Details
Call number
Available onsite only