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Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People (Hardcover)

by Helen Zia (Author) "Little China doll, what's your name?..." (more)
Key Phrases: yellow power, cannery workers, Asian American, United States, New York (more...)
4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
While growing up in New Jersey in the 1950s and '60s, Zia was provided with plenty of American history by her teachers, while her father inundated her with stories of China's past. Yet she was left wondering about people like herself, Asian Americans, who seemed to be "MIH--Missing in History." In this ambitious and richly detailed account of the formation of the Asian-American community--which extends from the first major wave of immigration to Gold Mountain" (as the Chinese dubbed America during the gold rush) to the recent influx of Southeast Asians, who since 1975 have nearly doubled the Asian-American population--Zia fills those absences, while examining the complex origins of the events she relates. The result is a vivid personal and national history, in which Zia guides us through a range of recent flash points that have galvanized the Asian-American community. Among them are the brutal, racially motivated murder of Vincent Chin in Detroit in 1982; the devastating riots in Los Angeles in 1992, where almost half of the $1 billion in damages to the city were sustained by Korean-American shop owners; and the embattled South Asian New York City cab drivers who, in May of 1998, banded together with the New York Taxi Workers alliance and pulled off a citywide strike. The recent boom in the Asian-American population (from half a million in the 1950s to 7.3 million in 1990), coupled with Zia's fresh perspective, makes it unlikely that their stories will go missing again. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Asian Americans have only recently emerged as a cohesive, self-identified racial group. Now, award-winning Asian American journalist Zia traces the changing politics and cultures of this significant but disjointed group of people by examining the incidents that helped galvanize them. Drawing on both family stories and public events (everything from the Vincent Chin affair to the boycott of Korean American--owned stores in Brooklyn) Zia surveys the history of Asian Americans, the rapid development of their new political force, and the unique issues they face. This well-written book is an important addition to the growing field of Asian American studies. Recommended for public and academic libraries.
-Mee-Len Hom, Hunter Coll. Lib., New York
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 356 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar Straus Giroux; 1st edition (March 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374147744
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374147747
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #822,602 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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29 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Where are you from?, November 20, 2002
By nunchi (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
I remember as a young child, other kids would ask me, "Where are you from?" Even though I was a native U.S. citizen, I would answer "Korea" without even thinking about it. Their response would be a blank stare and a "Where?" They all knew China, and even Japan, but rarely Korea. I grew up thinking that I was from a place that no one knew existed. Now when people ask me, "Where are you from?" I answer "Los Angeles," and I receive the response, "You know what I mean. Really, where are you from?" This question has plagued me throughout my life. People assume I cannot simply be an American - I must be a foreigner.

What Helen Zia has done is taken this universal experience among Asian Americans and transformed it into a quest to learn what it means to be Asian and American. She examines pivotal points in Asian American history and acknowledges racism, but also examines what Asian Americans must do as a whole to become seen as "American" and not as a "gook" or a "chink." As a college student who's done a little bit of research on Asian Americans, it enlightened me on my responsibilites to make my voice heard and also educated me on the history of the Asian American Civil Rights Movement - something that didn't even exist 60 years ago.

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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Asian American Dreams:, June 10, 2001
Asian American Dreams is really a touching book. It is touching not because it is a fiction with many moving plots and the hero or heroin possesses moving characteristics --- strictly speaking it is not a fiction --- but because it provides a description, a statement, a confession from the perspective of an Asian American woman writer who exposes so unelaborated, so frankly, so honestly, her innocent feelings about her being as an Asian American.

Helen Zia, the daughter of Chinese immigrants, born in New Jersey, grew up in the fifties when there were only 150, 000 Chinese Americans in the entire country. As an award-winning journalist who lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, Zia has covered Asian American communities and social and political movements for more than twenty years.

Different from the other minorities groups, she assumed what Chinese Americans wished to be was not how to preserve their cultural identity, instead, they tried to explore by what they could be made a fully American. However, she was obviously dissatisfied with she was forever conceived as an “alien” even she was born in New Jersey.

“There is a drill,” she wrote, “ that nearly all Asians in America have experienced more times than they can count. Total strangers will interrupt with the absurdly existential question ‘What are you?’ Or the equally common inquiry ‘Where are your from?’ Their queries are generally well intentioned, made in the same detached manner that you might use to inquire about a pooch’s breed.”

....

She clearly pointed out a situation that Asian Americans, particularly Chinese Americans, had been facing in the American setting. There had been stereotyped ideologies unaccommodating the political and social status of Chinese Americans. Some of the stereotyped concepts were unintended, nothing malicious. They perhaps were just a product of social interactions between different social, ethnic groups, each of which holding a culture-based (or maybe ethnic-chauvinism) point of view. However, some of those problems might have emerged because of the social, political, historical and economic reality.

....

Zia also described Asians Americans as an American minority, which could not evade from being racially and ethnically distinguished. A paragraph in his book touched upon the issue of equity:

“Comparison between the casting of Morgan Freeman and Jonathan Pryce also overlook the once common practice of Caucasian actors using make-up to darken their skins to play people of color, while, at the same time, other actors were barred from roles solely because of the color of their skin. To further suggest that Equity advocates the narrow-minded view that Jews can only play Jews, or Italians can only play Italians, or any similar casting that is drawn strictly along racial or ethnic lines, totally distorts the issue. Jews have always been able to play Italians, Italians have always been able to play Jews, and both have always been able to play Asian. Asian actors, however, almost never have the opportunity to play either Jews or Italians and continue to struggle even to play themselves.” Zia documented in great detail the issue of the play Miss Saigon. “After Pryce left Miss Saigon in 1992, every Engineer has been played by an actor of Asian descent. Despite Mackintosh’s initial argument that no Asian Americans were capable of acting the major roles, the play has successfully cycled several generations of Asian performers through its ranks – a direct result of the actors’ protest. ‘We may have lost the battle, but we won the war,’ said B. D. Wong.” ....Zia also noticed the changes that had been going on. “The evolution of new Asian American communities also complicated the notion of creating an Asian American identify with cultural image that can replace pernicious and simplistic stereotypes. If there was ever a ‘single’ identity group that could be described as diverse, Asian Americans are it. With our constant growth and change, we are our own moving target. There is no monolithic Asian American culture; it would be more accurate to speak of Asian American cultures. Is it possible to create cultural symbols and expression that can convey the richness and complexity of Asian Audience?”

“Film and video activists created media centers in Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Seattle, and Boston in the 1970s because Asian American had no access to mainstream television and film production. Media activists adhered to certain precepts for their works: ‘The fist was that being Asian American transcended the experience of being solely Chinese, Korean, or Japanese American,’ wrote Stephen Gong in Moving the Image: Independent Asian Pacific American Media Arts. ‘The second was a belief in the power of the media to effect social and cultural change…Mangy foresaw the opportunity of replacing negative media stereotypes with more authentic and affirmative images.’” However, as Zia quoted Renee Tajima-Pena, a filmmaker who produced Who Killed Vincent Chin? and My America:

“What still remained from the 1970s was the sense that we as Asian American artists were building a pan-Asian American culture from scratch.”

In the end of the book, Zia cited the Washington Post over the incident of Wen Ho Li:

“China’s spying, they say, more typically involves cajoling morsels of information out of visiting foreign experts and tasking thousands of Chinese abroad to bring secrets home one at a time like ants carrying grains of sand. The Chinese have been assembling such grains of sand since at least the fourth century BC, when the military philosopher Sun Tzu noted the value of espionage in his classic work, The Art of War.” Zia wrote, refuting the Washington Post’s new China spying fantasy:

“Students of history will recognize that the allusion to “ants” harks back to Cold War justification to drop nuclear bombs on China, whose people were likened to insects, ready to swarm into other countries. History buffs will also recall that bitter rivals Athens and Sparta were locked together in the Peloponnesian Wars around the time that Sun Tzu was writing his classic; surely Western civilization had discovered the art of espionage by then. Indeed, the Bible makes several referenced to spies --- centuries before Sun Tzu. But according to the “experts,” the cultural predilection of China toward espionage turns all Chinese American and visiting China nationals, from students and tourists to business representatives and diplomats into potential spies for China.” Zia finally expressed her sincere appealing for the right to have the same American dream as any other American ethnic groups have. She said:

“All Americans have an interest in a fair society that upholds its promise of equality and justice. It is a time when emergent Asian Americans are reaching out boldly to other communities to share our d

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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Powerful Vision of American Dreams, Asian or Not, April 13, 2000
We had the good fortune to have Ms. Zia come speak in our community as part of her tour for this book. I was particularly struck at this event by her realistic assessment of where Asian America comes from, has been, and is going. This vision is reflected in this wonderful book. "Asian American Dreams" looks at both the diversity within Asian America, and at the problematic place of Asians and Asian Americans in our bipolar (typically Black/White) racial dialogue. Ms. Zia begins each chapter with an anecdotal essay which allows us to glimpse her good humor, and for those of us raised outside of traditional Asian America, to see similarities with our own experiences that we hadn't thought to look for in the past. I highly recommend this book for everyone with an interest in "American" culture, society and racial/ethnic dialogue.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Book

In this 356-page tome, author Helen Zia, a second generation American Chinese, Princeton gradate, and award winning journalist, details the trials and tribulations... Read more
Published 10 months ago by L. Cui

2.0 out of 5 stars Interesting at times, but often contradictory
I know that this was a memoir, but at one chapter, the title is definately misleading, and many of the goals and events received highly biased coverage.

Ms. Read more
Published on September 10, 2006 by Michael Le Houllier

4.0 out of 5 stars Beyond black and white
This book is a great introduction or supplement to the study of Asian-American culture, and an significant edition. Read more
Published on June 26, 2006 by J. Ma

5.0 out of 5 stars Opinion from a 1.5 Filipino Librarian
Asian American Dreams has revealed the issues and circumstances of the Asian American that are shaping the society of the United States. Read more
Published on August 18, 2005 by Joel Bangilan

4.0 out of 5 stars a very readable history
Zia's accout of Asian American history is highly readable, panning a long stretch of time and focusing in on a series of major events (that are detailed in other reviews, which I... Read more
Published on December 13, 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars For those those interested in race beyond black and white
This book is a must read for those who are interested in any of the following: Asian American history, Asian American contributions to the civil rights movement, relationships... Read more
Published on June 29, 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Powerful and thought provoking
A good book for those wishing to learn more about Asian American history. After reading this book, I felt like I just finished taking a crash course on Asian American civil... Read more
Published on November 23, 2000 by Garrett Masuda

3.0 out of 5 stars A good overview that doesn't reveal anything new
Helen Zia provides a good overview of the Asian Pacific American (APA) experience in the United States and highlights specific examples where APAs faced gross discrimination and... Read more
Published on August 23, 2000 by Michael

5.0 out of 5 stars Must read for every Asian American teen
This book is written so well and is suprisingly "readable" to the average teenager. For every Asian American teenager out there, this is a must read! Read more
Published on August 14, 2000

5.0 out of 5 stars This was an excellent book! My highest recommendation!
Helen Zia weaves her personal (and amazing) story with major events in Asian American history. I learned so much that I should have learned in school - but in an engaging and... Read more
Published on July 15, 2000

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