Alien Neighbors, Foreign Friends
Asian Americans, Housing, and the Transformation of Urban California
Alien Neighbors, Foreign Friends
Asian Americans, Housing, and the Transformation of Urban California
Between the early 1900s and the late 1950s, the attitudes of white Californians toward their Asian American neighbors evolved from outright hostility to relative acceptance. Charlotte Brooks examines this transformation through the lens of California’s urban housing markets, arguing that the perceived foreignness of Asian Americans, which initially stranded them in segregated areas, eventually facilitated their integration into neighborhoods that rejected other minorities.
Against the backdrop of cold war efforts to win Asian hearts and minds, whites who saw little difference between Asians and Asian Americans increasingly advocated the latter group’s access to middle-class life and the residential areas that went with it. But as they transformed Asian Americans into a “model minority,” whites purposefully ignored the long backstory of Chinese and Japanese Americans’ early and largely failed attempts to participate in public and private housing programs. As Brooks tells this multifaceted story, she draws on a broad range of sources in multiple languages, giving voice to an array of community leaders, journalists, activists, and homeowners—and insightfully conveying the complexity of racialized housing in a multiracial society.
352 pages | 8 halftones, 9 line drawings, 1 table | 6 x 9 | © 2009
Historical Studies of Urban America
Asian Studies: General Asian Studies
History: American History, Urban History
Political Science: Urban Politics
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I. Alien Neighbors
Chapter 1
Chinatown, San Francisco: America’s First Segregated Neighborhood
Chapter 2
Los Angeles: America’s “White Spot”
Chapter 3
The New Deal’s Third Track: Asian American Citizenship and Public Housing in Depression-Era Los Angeles
Chapter 4
“Housing Seems to Be the Problem”: Asian Americans and New Deal Housing Programs in San Francisco
Chapter 5
The Subdivision and the War: From Jefferson Park to Internment
Part II. Foreign Friends
Chapter 6
“Glorified and Mounted on a Pedestal”: San Francisco Chinatown at War
Chapter 7
Equally Unequal: Asian Americans and the Fight for Housing Rights in Postwar California
Chapter 8
“The Orientals Whose Friendship Is So Important”: Asian Americans and the Values of Property in Cold War California
Epilogue
Notes
IndexAwards
Organization of American Historians: Frederick Jackson Turner Award
Honorable Mention
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