The Chinese in America - Iris Chang [249]
Chen, Lawrence
Chen, Lilac
Chen, Pehong
Cheng, S. J. Benjamin
Chen Ke
Chen Lanbing
Chennault, Anna
Chen Wencheng
Chen Yuxi
Chern, Sing-Shen
Cheung, Katherine
Chew, Beng
Chew, Ng Poon
Chew, Thomas Foon
Chew, William Chiang, Joseph
Chiang Kai-shek
Chicago
Chicago Tribune
children: American-born. See Chinese American(s) and American-born Chinese (ABCs); in China ; foreign-born, citizenship right for ; girls, adoption of; of Hong Kong immigrants; identity crises of; indoctrination of; mixed-race; one-child policy; racism against, effects of; return to Fujian province of; smuggling of ; in Taiwan; Taiwanese “parachute,” ; working
Chin, James W
Chin, Ko-lin
Chin, Lily
Chin, Vincent
Chin, Won-Loy
China. See also People’s Republic of China (PRC); Republic of China; specific cities; specific provinces: American capital banned in; Boxer Rebellion (1900) ; boycott of American goods in; civilization of; civil service system; civil war; clothing customs; Communist Party; Communist Revolution (1949) ; concession areas; corruption of; Cultural Revolution (1966-76); culture of; decline as world power; diversity of; education in; emigration policies of; employment of American-born Chinese in; ethnic minorities; examinationsservice ; First Sino-Japanese War; food supplies; geography of; Gold Mountain families. See Gold Mountain families; government of. See also Qing dynasty; Hundred Days’ Reform Movement (1898); inland; isolation of; Japanese aggression toward; life expectancy in; Long March (1934); May Fourth movement (1919); merchant class in ; as meritocracy; Nationalists. See National People’s Party (Kuomintang); Northern Expedition (1926-28); opium trade in; peasant life. See peasants and peasant life; People’s Republic of. See People’s Republic of China (PRC); population of; port cities. See also specific cities; poverty in; prisons; professional class; prosperity in; rebellions in ; recruitment of workers in; Red Turban rebellion (1853); Republic of; ruling class ; Sino-Japanese War; study of, in American schools; travel in; United States and, relations between. See Sino-American relations; U.S. military in; wealth and upper classes in; western; Western concepts of; working class; written language of
China Daily News
Chinatown, Chicago’s
Chinatown, New York’s
Chinatown, San Francisco’s; architecture of; businesses in ; Chinese civil war and;
conditions in; earthquake of 1906 and; living conditions;
nightclubs; origins of;
prostitution in; quarantine of ; tourism in
Chinatowns. See also specific Chinatowns; Chinese civil war and ; decline of; East Coast; exodus from; government surveillance of; Great Depression, effect on; high rents in ; myths about; numbers of; old versus new immigrants in ; Taiwanese and; violence in
China Workers Mutual Aid Association
China World
China Youth Club
Chinese: as “black,” ; concepts of United States held by ; as sideshow curiosities; slavery of; travel by
Chinese American(s) and American-born Chinese (ABCs). See also immigrants, Chinese; Taiwanese Americans and immigrants; as activists ; African Americans and; ancestry of; Asian Americans and; assimilation of ; author’s experience as ; China and, relation between ; citizenship rights of; cold war and; contributions of; credit systems of; cultural identity of ; departure from United States prevented; earliest; economic losses in China by; education of; employment opportunities . See also specific occupations; foreign-born and, ratio between; fragility of rights of ; Japanese Americans and ; job discrimination against ; leisure activities of; in military; mixed-race; as “model minority,” ; Native Americans and;
Chinese American(s) and American-born Chinese (ABCs) (cont.): new immigrants and; numbers of; other immigrants and; Pearl Harbor attack and; prosperity of; racism against. See racism, anti-Chinese; reentry, right of ; regions populated by; return to China by; role models lacking for; sex differences in upbringing; Sino-Japanese War and; social life of ; stereotypes of ; in suburbia; women. See women,