• Wyszukiwanie zaawansowane
  • Kategorie
  • Kategorie BISAC
  • Książki na zamówienie
  • Promocje
  • Granty
  • Książka na prezent
  • Opinie
  • Pomoc
  • Załóż konto
  • Zaloguj się

Race, Law, and the Chinese Puzzle in Imperial Britain » książka

zaloguj się | załóż konto
Logo Krainaksiazek.pl

koszyk

konto

szukaj
topmenu
Księgarnia internetowa
Szukaj
Książki na zamówienie
Promocje
Granty
Książka na prezent
Moje konto
Pomoc
 
 
Wyszukiwanie zaawansowane
Pusty koszyk
Bezpłatna dostawa dla zamówień powyżej 20 złBezpłatna dostawa dla zamówień powyżej 20 zł

Kategorie główne

• Nauka
 [2952079]
• Literatura piękna
 [1850969]

  więcej...
• Turystyka
 [71058]
• Informatyka
 [151066]
• Komiksy
 [35579]
• Encyklopedie
 [23181]
• Dziecięca
 [620496]
• Hobby
 [139036]
• AudioBooki
 [1646]
• Literatura faktu
 [228729]
• Muzyka CD
 [379]
• Słowniki
 [2932]
• Inne
 [445708]
• Kalendarze
 [1409]
• Podręczniki
 [164793]
• Poradniki
 [480107]
• Religia
 [510956]
• Czasopisma
 [511]
• Sport
 [61267]
• Sztuka
 [243299]
• CD, DVD, Video
 [3411]
• Technologie
 [219640]
• Zdrowie
 [100984]
• Książkowe Klimaty
 [124]
• Zabawki
 [2281]
• Puzzle, gry
 [3363]
• Literatura w języku ukraińskim
 [258]
• Art. papiernicze i szkolne
 [8020]
Kategorie szczegółowe BISAC

Race, Law, and the Chinese Puzzle in Imperial Britain

ISBN-13: 9781137281975 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 282 str.

Sascha Auerbach
Race, Law, and the Chinese Puzzle in Imperial Britain Auerbach, S. 9781137281975  - książkaWidoczna okładka, to zdjęcie poglądowe, a rzeczywista szata graficzna może różnić się od prezentowanej.

Race, Law, and the Chinese Puzzle in Imperial Britain

ISBN-13: 9781137281975 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 282 str.

Sascha Auerbach
cena 201,24
(netto: 191,66 VAT:  5%)

Najniższa cena z 30 dni: 192,74
Termin realizacji zamówienia:
ok. 22 dni roboczych.

Darmowa dostawa!
inne wydania

In the early twentieth century, Chinese immigration became the focal point for racial panic in Britain. Fears about its moral and economic impact - amplified by press sensationalism and lurid fictional portrayals of London's original 'Chinatown' as a den of vice and iniquity - prompted mass arrests, deportations, and mob violence. Even after the neighborhood was demolished and its inhabitants dispersed, the stereotype of the Chinese criminal mastermind and other 'yellow peril' images remained as permanent aspects of British culture. This painstakingly researched study traces the historical evolution of Chinese communities in Britain during this period, revealing their significance in the development of race as a category in British culture, law, and politics.

Kategorie:
Nauka, Historia
Kategorie BISAC:
History > Europe - Great Britain - General
Social Science > Antropologia - Kultury
History > Asia - China
Język:
Angielski
ISBN-13:
9781137281975
Rok wydania:
2012
Wydanie:
2009
Ilość stron:
282
Waga:
0.32 kg
Wymiary:
21.34 x 13.72 x 1.52
Oprawa:
Miękka
Wolumenów:
01
Dodatkowe informacje:
Bibliografia
Wydanie ilustrowane

"Auerbach engages directly with the question that underpins much of the historiography in this area: was fear of economic competition or racism the ultimate cause of anti-Chinese attitudes? The book presents persuasive evidence and turns significant new light onto the same question within the empire. Too seldom has comparative engagement with this obviously transnational issue been undertaken, and Auerbach s study is the more to be commended because of this." - American Historical Review

"Sascha Auerbach's Race, Law, and "the Chinese Puzzle" in Imperial Britain is a significant contribution to the scholarly literature on Anglo-American representations of China and the Chinese and on the historical experiences of the Chinese Diaspora. What makes this particular book stand out from many others is its success in delineating the symbiotic relationship between representations and praxis - in other words, the manner in which derogatory and racist media representations of Chinese people living in Britain in the the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries influenced the treatment of Chinese people in the judicial system, and how the reports of these legal judgments then in turn reinforced the ways in which the Chinese in Britain were dipicted in media and literature, creating a vicious cycle of negative representation." - David Lloyd Smith, H-Net Reviews

"This is a nuanced exploration of a distinct 'moment' in British culture, politics and racial relations . . . Scholars of Britishness/Englishness, as well as cultural and imperial historians more broadly, will find much to engage in this excellent and important book." - Twentieth Century British History

"This book is a welcome addition to the growing literature of the ethnic Chinese in Britain, because it gives substance, social and political context and depth of vision to some of the racist themes that today are only vaguely known as a handful of jaded slogans, names and topics of another age. Auerbach must be commended for his systematic exploration of a huge collection of scattered sources, the basic integrity and thoroughness of his account, and his subtle analysis of racism as a cultural phenomenon. This enables the reader to be drawn into a sound and reflecting engagement with the issues. Sascha Auerbach delivers the raw materials on which we will be able to build our analyses of how racist discourse works. In that sense, it is a timely and highly accomplished contribution to the literature about both anti-Chinese racism and to race relations in the colonial period." - Reviews in History

"Auerbach offers the first comprehensive narrative of Chinese communities in modern Britain, focusing on the tangle ofrace and labor and empire that gave shape to their discursive and material histories. In so doing, he nuances recent work on English national-imperial identity, pointing us to the law and public policy, to docks and alleyways, to the ship and the jury box, to the Transvaal and the U.S. and Australia and beyond. The debate over Chinese labor is a fruitful angle of vision, enabling us to appreciate the complexities of modern imperial cultures in new and productive ways." - Antoinette Burton, Professor and Chair, Department of History and Catherine C. and Bruce A. Bastian Professor of Global and Transnational Studies, University of Illinois

"London's Chinese communities in the early twentieth century may have been small, but as Auerbach convincingly shows, they catalyzed a degree of anxiety disproportionate to their numbers. Neatly demonstrating the relations between fears of inter-racial sex, labour dilution and drug addiction, Auerbach opens a window onto the lives of Chinese immigrants in London. This is a lively and compelling exploration of anti-Chinese sentiment in Britain and its empire, and skillfully underscores the critical links between empire, race and gender." - Philippa Levine, author of The British Empire, Sunrise to Sunset (2007) and Prostitution, Race and Politics: Policing Venereal Disease in the British Empire (2003)

'Chinese Labour' and the Imperial Dimensions of British Racial Discourse The Dragon and Saint George, 1910-1914 'Most insidious is the Oriental in the West': Chinese and Britons in Wartime London East (End) Meets West (End) 'This Plague Spot of the Metropolis,' 1919-1921 Epilogue: The Ghosts of Chinatown

SASCHA AUERBACH is an Assistant Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University, USA.



Udostępnij

Facebook - konto krainaksiazek.pl



Opinie o Krainaksiazek.pl na Opineo.pl

Partner Mybenefit

Krainaksiazek.pl w programie rzetelna firma Krainaksiaze.pl - płatności przez paypal

Czytaj nas na:

Facebook - krainaksiazek.pl
  • książki na zamówienie
  • granty
  • książka na prezent
  • kontakt
  • pomoc
  • opinie
  • regulamin
  • polityka prywatności

Zobacz:

  • Księgarnia czeska

  • Wydawnictwo Książkowe Klimaty

1997-2026 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa

© 1997-2022 krainaksiazek.pl
     
KONTAKT | REGULAMIN | POLITYKA PRYWATNOŚCI | USTAWIENIA PRYWATNOŚCI
Zobacz: Księgarnia Czeska | Wydawnictwo Książkowe Klimaty | Mapa strony | Lista autorów
KrainaKsiazek.PL - Księgarnia Internetowa
Polityka prywatnosci - link
Krainaksiazek.pl - płatnośc Przelewy24
Przechowalnia Przechowalnia