Description
Book SynopsisReveals how community-based organizations create innovative spaces for political participation among new generations of Korean Americans.
Trade Review"Unique and illuminating, this is the first book to examine the political and social service organizations in a multiethnic enclave. It will become a model for future studies of multiethnic enclaves in the post-1965 era, and makes a significant contribution not only to Asian American studies, but also to studies of immigration, ethnic and race relations, and social service organizations." -- Pyong Gap Min * Queens College CUNY, author of
Caught in the Middle: Korean Merchants in America's Multiethnic Cities *
"This book successfully conveys an important facet of the contemporary dynamic of ethnicity." -- Seungsook Moon *
American Journal of Sociology. *
"Perceptively attentive to institutional context, collective identities, and individual experiences, Angie Chung shows how "bridging" ethnic organizations carve out a distinctive political space. In illustrating the form and role of two such organizations, she provides an innovative rethinking of how ethnic political solidarity is rearticulated and sustained in the face of the Korean American community's increasing generational differences, class disparities, and residential dispersal." -- Michael Omi, University of California * Berkeley *
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Legacies of Struggle is a well-researched, thoughtful study of modern American ethnic dynamics, covering the Korean American immigrant experience, the development of Koreatown, and the examination [of] the racial conflicts and social challenges." --
Korean Quarterly"Chung offers readers an analysis of the role of community-based organizations in the political landscape of the Korean community in the Los Angeles area... This work will be most useful for those studying contemporary ethnic politics, the roles of contemporary ethnic organizations, and Asian American adaptation in the US." --
CHOICETable of ContentsContents List of Tables and Maps Preface 1 Introduction Part One: Burning Bridges 2 The Making of Koreatown, LA 3 Convergent Destinies and the Ethnic Elite 4 The Events That Shook the World 5 The Politics of Incorporation and Marginalization Today Part Two: Building Bridges 6 The Historical Evolution of KYCC and KIWA 7 Giving Back to the Community 8 Doing Politics Without the Politics 9 Organizational Carework and the Women of KYCC and KIWA 10 United We Stand, Divided We Speak List of Organizations Notes Works Cited Index