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Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans

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Title: Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans


1
Chapter 13
  • Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans

2
Chinese Americans
  • Chinese immigration was met with mixed sentiments
    from 1848 onward
  • Chinese exclusion act of 1882 - 1943
  • Gradual immigration from 1943 - 1965
  • Increase in immigration came with the passage of
    the 1965 Immigration Act
  • Push and pull factors

3
(No Transcript)
4
Occupational Profile of Chinese Americans
  • Early on discriminatory laws were passed making
    it difficult for Chinese to enter certain
    occupations
  • Early on gravitated toward service occupations or
    low paying jobs that whites found undesirable
  • Chinatown and the tourist industry

5
Occupational Profile of Chinese Americans
  • Chinatown and the tourist industry
  • Double-edged sword
  • Provides jobs (albeit at low wages)
  • But also forces Chinatown to keep its problems
    quiet and not seek outside assistance
  • slums do not attract tourists Schaefer
  • Similar to Native Americans in their dependency
    on tourism
  • Jobs
  • New immigrants find it difficult finding jobs
    outside of Chinatown
  • Lack of English is another reason for new
    immigrants seeking work in Chinatown

6
Chinatowns Today
  • The economic paradox of Chinatowns
  • The impression of glitter and wealth among hidden
    economic deprivation and poverty in Chinatown
  • Organizational life
  • Clan or tsu organization and functions (Surname
    Association)
  • Membership based on clan and family ties

7
Organization
  • Benevolent associations or hui kuan (organization
    based on kinship ties)
  • Assist in the adjustment to a new country
  • Membership is based on district of origin
  • Hui kuan associations are part of a larger
    organization, Chinese Six Companies, (Chinese
    Consolidated Benevolent Association)
  • Tongs or secret societies formed on the basis of
    common interests

8
Conclusions about Social Organizations
  • Evolved from Chinese traditions and customs
  • All three types have performed similar functions
    providing assistance and representing interests
    to dominant group

9
Conclusions about Social Organizations
  • Inter-conflict between the associations
  • Decline in significance
  • Downplay their problems within the Chinese
    community with the dominant group

10
Social Problems
  • The tourist industry in Chinatown as double edged
    sword
  • Jobs but at substandard pay
  • Poverty
  • Health
  • Suicide
  • Poor housing
  • Crime
  • Poor working conditions
  • Other

11
Family and Religious Life
  • In the Peoples Republic of China organized
    religion barely exists
  • Buddhism
  • Christianity
  • Other faiths
  • Variation of acculturation on Chinese family
    structure

12
  • Less acculturated the greater the emphasis on
    extended family and patriarchal authority
  • Effect of immigration on family structure

13
Japanese Americans
  • Initial Japanese immigrants came around 1885
    (Push and pull factors)
  • Came from a very stratified society
  • Most came from the lower class in Japan
  • Initially many found employment in forestry,
    agriculture and then migrated to cities along the
    West Coast and established small businesses

14
Generational Identity
  • Issei - first generation immigrants born in Japan
  • Nissei - second generation American born children
    of the Issei
  • (Kibei)
  • Sansei - third generation
  • Yonsei - fourth generation

15
Early Discrimination
  • Laws were passed prohibiting Issei from becoming
    citizens
  • California Alien Land Act of 1913
  • Economic impact on agricultural land owned by
    Japanese Americans
  • Adjustments to the act led many to transfer
    ownership to their American born children
  • Many left agriculture in the 1920s and migrated
    to cities and established small businesses
    catering to both the Japanese and dominant group
    because of this legislation

16
Wartime Evacuation
  • Executive order 9066, signed by Roosevelt on
    February 13, 1942
  • Economic cost to the evacuees was in excess of
    400,000,000 or in current dollars 3.7 billion
  • Psychological impact
  • The way out and the loyalty test

17
Evacuation
  • It was rapid, smooth, and efficient primarily
    because of the cooperativeness of the Japanese.
  • lack of resistance led some to justify the
    action, through blaming the victim mentality
  • Fisher reports that only 2,300 of the evacuees
    asked to be sent back to Japan.
  • Were these camps concentration camps?

18
Why Were the Japanese Evacuated?
  • Kitano offers a multi-factor interpretation
  • 1. Racism
  • 2. Pressure from individuals groups
  • 3. Background of anti-Asian feelings
  • 4. Wartime fears
  • 5. General lack of knowledge about Japanese by
    most Americans

19
Economic Picture
  • Upward mobility after WWII
  • Japanese American educational attainment is
    higher than whites
  • Occupationally have been upwardly mobile but
    still experience the glass ceiling and wall
  • Higher median family income than whites

20
Family and Religious Life
  • Acculturation and change in family structure
  • Conjugal nuclear family structure
  • Neolocal pattern of residence
  • Outgroup marriage is increasing and is
    approximately 50 among the Yonsei
  • Rising divorce rate

21
Family and Religious Life
  • Dual religious customs in Japan
  • Shinto
  • Buddhism
  • United States the emphasis is on belonging to a
    single religion
  • Impact is changing religious customs over time
    among Japanese-Americans

22
Remnants of Prejudice and Discrimination
  • The decline in overt prejudice
  • Subtle forms still exist
  • Job discrimination
  • However, Chinese Americans and Japanese Americans
    believe that prejudice and racism have decreased
  • Assimilation

23
Figure 13-2 Intergroup Relations Continuum
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