

An edition of Vancouver's Chinatown (1991)
racial discourse in Canada, 1875-1980
By Kay Anderson
Publish Date
1991
Publisher
McGill-Queen's University Press
Language
eng
Pages
323
Description:
Popular wisdom maintains that the colourful Chinese quarters of Canadian, American, and Australian cities owe their existence to the generations of Chinese immigrants who have made their lives there. The restaurants, pagodas, and neon lights are seen as intrinsically connected to the Chinese and their immigrant experience in the West. Kay Anderson argues, however, that "Chinatown" is a Western construction, illustrative of a process of cultural domination that gave European settlers in North America and Australia the power to define and shape the district according to their own images and interests. --
subjects: Chinese, Race relations, Race, Chinese Canadians, History, Canadiens d'origine chinoise, Histoire, Chinesen, Rassenverhoudingen, Racisme, Chinois, Intégration, Immigrés, Émigration et immigration, Politique publique
Places: British Columbia, Chinatown (Vancouver, B.C.), Vancouver, Vancouver (B.C.)