Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: US-China Relations at a Historic Crossroad
- Part One Background and Lost Voices
- 1 From Admirer to Critic: Li Dazhao’s Changing Attitudes toward the United States
- 2 Legacy of the Exclusion Act and Chinese Americans’ Experience
- 3 Disillusioned Diplomacy: US Policy towards Wang Jingwei’s Reorganized National Government, 1938–1945
- Part Two Did America Lose China?
- 4 Lost Opportunity or Mission Impossible: A Historiographical Essay on the Marshall Mission to China, December 1945–January 1947
- 5 Negotiating from Strength: US-China Diplomatic Challenges at the Korean War Armistice Conference, 1951–1953
- 6 Mao Zedong and the Taiwan Strait Crises
- Part Three Rapprochement and Opportunities
- 7 Media and US-China Reconciliation
- 8 Sino-American Relations in the Wake of Tiananmen, 1989–1991
- 9 Jiang Zemin and the United States: Hiding Hatred and Biding Time for Revenge
- Part Four Did China Lose America?
- 10 China’s Belt-Road Strategy: Xinjiang’s Role in a System without America
- 11 The East and South China Seas in Sino-US Relations
- Conclusion: The Coming Cold War II?
- Index
2 - Legacy of the Exclusion Act and Chinese Americans’ Experience
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: US-China Relations at a Historic Crossroad
- Part One Background and Lost Voices
- 1 From Admirer to Critic: Li Dazhao’s Changing Attitudes toward the United States
- 2 Legacy of the Exclusion Act and Chinese Americans’ Experience
- 3 Disillusioned Diplomacy: US Policy towards Wang Jingwei’s Reorganized National Government, 1938–1945
- Part Two Did America Lose China?
- 4 Lost Opportunity or Mission Impossible: A Historiographical Essay on the Marshall Mission to China, December 1945–January 1947
- 5 Negotiating from Strength: US-China Diplomatic Challenges at the Korean War Armistice Conference, 1951–1953
- 6 Mao Zedong and the Taiwan Strait Crises
- Part Three Rapprochement and Opportunities
- 7 Media and US-China Reconciliation
- 8 Sino-American Relations in the Wake of Tiananmen, 1989–1991
- 9 Jiang Zemin and the United States: Hiding Hatred and Biding Time for Revenge
- Part Four Did China Lose America?
- 10 China’s Belt-Road Strategy: Xinjiang’s Role in a System without America
- 11 The East and South China Seas in Sino-US Relations
- Conclusion: The Coming Cold War II?
- Index
Summary
Abstract
The core of the new cold war is racism. The race issue cannot be isolated to US policies in relationship with other countries, nor to its domestic policies. The world was dragged into more than half a century of Cold War between the two major camps of the Soviet Union and the United States. Meanwhile, the rise of China in global affairs and its rapid economic and technological development alarmed the United States and its European allies. Taking the neo-Churchillian view of the post-war globe, and sticking to old playbooks, the old WWII reenactors envision China as an autocratic foil against which democracy wages a global struggle.
Keywords: Racism, Exclusion Acts, Migration and immigration, Transnational identity, Constitutional rights, Racial discrimination and resistance
Introduction
It has been one and a half centuries since Congress passed the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act, signed into law by President Chester Alan Arthur and enforced vigorously. The Chinese Exclusion Law and other anti-Chinese laws shadowed the lives of the Chinese in the United States for more than sixty-one years until 1943, when they were eventually repealed. However, the fraudulent accusations against the Chinese as ‘disease carriers’ and ‘cheap laborers in the political rhetoric of the nineteenth century still echo in our current situation. The frequent usage of the scientifically baseless and racist slur ‘China virus’ still hits Chinese Americans hard. President Donald Trump used the slur to directly attack China in a time of public health crisis when the Covid-19 pandemic spread around the world. It hurts the lives of Chinese Americans, causing pain in their hearts. ‘Disease carriers’ and ‘China virus’ run in the same historical groove, stirring hatred, racial antagonism, and social conflict. However, the reckless accusations and racially discriminatory legislation against Chinese Americans did not go without opposition and resistance.
The Chinese in the United States pursued justice through the judiciary process, rallied and petitioned to voice their demand for racial equality and, more importantly, continued their participation in social, political, and economic activities, claiming themselves to be Americans during a time when anti-Chinese legislation was imposed. Their fight for racial equality continues into the twenty-first century.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Sino-American RelationsA New Cold War, pp. 55 - 80Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022