Description

Book Synopsis
Discusses the impacts of racial crime, exploring the relationship between the physical or verbal acts to issues of ethnic identity, civil rights of immigrants, Internet racism, sexual violence, language and violence, economic scapegoating, and police brutality. This work offers suggestions for combating hate crime.

Trade Review
This is a necessary book and, in light of the recent wave of Asian migration to Canada, a timely one as well. The editors have assembled a collection of essays that tear away the theory and rhetoric to expose the human cost of racism whether it is directed against recent immigrants or those who have been here for generations. Anyone involved in human rights will read this book with feelings of anger, sadness, and ultimately, renewal of purpose. -- Kuan Foo, President, Vancouver Association of Chinese Canadians, and Equity and Diversity Program Coordinator for the Law Society of Briti
This path-breaking anthology—which focuses on incidents ranging from death threats to murderous attacks in the U.S. and Canada—indicates why anti-Asian violence is systemic in North America. Raw emotions are courageously explored by the authors in terms of the psychological, social, and political impact of bein assaulted. The horrific cases report, count, and combat hate crimes of all kinds. -- Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Department of Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder
Anti-Asian Violence in North America is compellingly written, authoritative, and essential. I was captivated by the chilling accounts of the anti-Asian experience which are novelistically told and make for fascinating reading. Each chapter is a reflective portrait expressing the sentiment of the fundamental miscarriage of justice that so many Asians feel but are often reluctant to acknowledge. -- Craig Fujii, Civil Rights lawyer, Arizona
This collection of essays is a unique contribution to North American history, telling the troubling story of violence, both in Canada and the United States, against Asian Americans. It is a story heretofore unknown and it is told as a fascinating series of personal experiences, rather than as a dry historical account. It deserves to be widely read. -- Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States and professor emeritus of Political Science, Boston University
The fatal impact and consequences of anti-Asian violence should not be confined to knowledge for an elite group of individuals. By using a style that is accessible and not intellectually insulting to anyone, the editors and writers of this book have contributed much to the awareness and scholarship of anti-Asian violence. -- Lorraine Dong, San Francisco State University * Journal of American Ethnic History, (Fall 2002) *
Provides welcome perspectives on the impact of prejudice and racism.... The authors...collectively offer a useful comparative view of anti-Asian violence in the U.S. and Canada. Suitable for general and academic audiences. -- F. Ng, California State University, Fresno * CHOICE *
Hall and Hwang's collection has value because it reveals the wide diversity of Asian ethnicities, cultures, social/economic conditions, and the myriad experiences of Asians in North America...I highly recommend this book. -- Lupe Llorente Allen * NACADA Journal *

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part One: Activism and the Law Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Transferred Intent: The Pervasiveness of Hate Crimes Chapter 4 Chapter 2: The Interrelationships between Anti-Asian Violence and Asian America Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Hate Crime on the Internet: The University of California, Irvine Case Chapter 6 Chapter 4: From Vincent Chin to Kuan Chung Kao: Restoring the Dignity to their Lives Part 7 Part Two: Language and Identity Chapter 8 Chapter 5: Some Substitute Stories, Out of School Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Fire at my Face: Growing up Immigrant Part 10 Part Three: Growth and Resistance Chapter 11 Chapter 7: Am I Beautiful Now? Chapter 12 Chapter 8: Newly Immigrated to America: A Narrative of Violence Chapter 13 Chapter 9: To Serve and Protect Chapter 14 Chapter 10: My Noose Part 15 Part Four: Epilogue and Afterword 16 Epilogue 17 Afterword

AntiAsian Violence in North America Asian

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    A Paperback / softback by Patricia Wong Hall, Victor M. Hwang, Mary-Woo Sims

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      View other formats and editions of AntiAsian Violence in North America Asian by Patricia Wong Hall

      Publisher: AltaMira Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 09/05/2001
      ISBN13: 9780742504592, 978-0742504592
      ISBN10: 074250459X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Discusses the impacts of racial crime, exploring the relationship between the physical or verbal acts to issues of ethnic identity, civil rights of immigrants, Internet racism, sexual violence, language and violence, economic scapegoating, and police brutality. This work offers suggestions for combating hate crime.

      Trade Review
      This is a necessary book and, in light of the recent wave of Asian migration to Canada, a timely one as well. The editors have assembled a collection of essays that tear away the theory and rhetoric to expose the human cost of racism whether it is directed against recent immigrants or those who have been here for generations. Anyone involved in human rights will read this book with feelings of anger, sadness, and ultimately, renewal of purpose. -- Kuan Foo, President, Vancouver Association of Chinese Canadians, and Equity and Diversity Program Coordinator for the Law Society of Briti
      This path-breaking anthology—which focuses on incidents ranging from death threats to murderous attacks in the U.S. and Canada—indicates why anti-Asian violence is systemic in North America. Raw emotions are courageously explored by the authors in terms of the psychological, social, and political impact of bein assaulted. The horrific cases report, count, and combat hate crimes of all kinds. -- Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, Department of Ethnic Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder
      Anti-Asian Violence in North America is compellingly written, authoritative, and essential. I was captivated by the chilling accounts of the anti-Asian experience which are novelistically told and make for fascinating reading. Each chapter is a reflective portrait expressing the sentiment of the fundamental miscarriage of justice that so many Asians feel but are often reluctant to acknowledge. -- Craig Fujii, Civil Rights lawyer, Arizona
      This collection of essays is a unique contribution to North American history, telling the troubling story of violence, both in Canada and the United States, against Asian Americans. It is a story heretofore unknown and it is told as a fascinating series of personal experiences, rather than as a dry historical account. It deserves to be widely read. -- Howard Zinn, author of A People's History of the United States and professor emeritus of Political Science, Boston University
      The fatal impact and consequences of anti-Asian violence should not be confined to knowledge for an elite group of individuals. By using a style that is accessible and not intellectually insulting to anyone, the editors and writers of this book have contributed much to the awareness and scholarship of anti-Asian violence. -- Lorraine Dong, San Francisco State University * Journal of American Ethnic History, (Fall 2002) *
      Provides welcome perspectives on the impact of prejudice and racism.... The authors...collectively offer a useful comparative view of anti-Asian violence in the U.S. and Canada. Suitable for general and academic audiences. -- F. Ng, California State University, Fresno * CHOICE *
      Hall and Hwang's collection has value because it reveals the wide diversity of Asian ethnicities, cultures, social/economic conditions, and the myriad experiences of Asians in North America...I highly recommend this book. -- Lupe Llorente Allen * NACADA Journal *

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction Part 2 Part One: Activism and the Law Chapter 3 Chapter 1: Transferred Intent: The Pervasiveness of Hate Crimes Chapter 4 Chapter 2: The Interrelationships between Anti-Asian Violence and Asian America Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Hate Crime on the Internet: The University of California, Irvine Case Chapter 6 Chapter 4: From Vincent Chin to Kuan Chung Kao: Restoring the Dignity to their Lives Part 7 Part Two: Language and Identity Chapter 8 Chapter 5: Some Substitute Stories, Out of School Chapter 9 Chapter 6: Fire at my Face: Growing up Immigrant Part 10 Part Three: Growth and Resistance Chapter 11 Chapter 7: Am I Beautiful Now? Chapter 12 Chapter 8: Newly Immigrated to America: A Narrative of Violence Chapter 13 Chapter 9: To Serve and Protect Chapter 14 Chapter 10: My Noose Part 15 Part Four: Epilogue and Afterword 16 Epilogue 17 Afterword

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