作者:陈向明
出版社:河南教育出版社
索书号:LC3071.C518
年份:-
介绍:虽然近年来中国学生留美热方兴未艾,有关留学生生活的文学书籍和一般性讨论也日益增多,但是,对留美中国学生的跨文化人际交往进行深入细致的学术研究尚无先例。本书运用系统周密的定性研究方法对一群留美中国学生进行了长达一年的追踪调查,从遮羞留学生自己的视角再现了他们初到美国时的生活经历以及他们核对自己行为的意义的解释。
作者:陈向明
出版社:河南教育出版社
索书号:LC3071.C518
年份:-
介绍:虽然近年来中国学生留美热方兴未艾,有关留学生生活的文学书籍和一般性讨论也日益增多,但是,对留美中国学生的跨文化人际交往进行深入细致的学术研究尚无先例。本书运用系统周密的定性研究方法对一群留美中国学生进行了长达一年的追踪调查,从遮羞留学生自己的视角再现了他们初到美国时的生活经历以及他们核对自己行为的意义的解释。
Author:Corinne K. Hoexter
Publisher:Four Winds Press
Publishing Year:1976
Call Number:F855.2.C5H695
Introduction:The date is August 28,1859.The place,Portsmouth Plaza in San Francisco. A crowd has gathered to hear the Reverend Albert Williams and the Reverend Timothy Dwight address a welcome to 100 “sober-faced” Chinese men. As the minister’s reference to an “afterlife” is translated into Cantonese, the seemingly expressionless faces of the Chinese undergo a change and the 100 immigrants begin to laugh heartily.
The concept of an afterlife was incredible to these men from a different culture, and but one of the cultural differences that made life in America so difficult for the Chinese immigrants in the nineteenth century.
What brought these people across the Pacific to the United States? And how did they live when they got here? to answer these questions, the author takes you back to China.It was there, near the city of Canton, that westerners first came to know the Chinese and formed many misconceptions about their culture and way of life.These misconceptions led to serious clashes between the Americans and the Chinese as the Chinese, lured by takes of a “Mountain of Gold”, began to immigrate to the New World in the 1850s.
This book traces the history of the Chinese in America and, in particular, the history of one man, Dr. Ng Poon Chew. As editor of the first Chinese-language newspaper in the United States, Dr. Chew became the leader and the spokesman for Chinese-Americans across the nation until his death in 1931.
Publisher: First Second, New York & London
Publishing Year: 2006
Call Number: E184.C5 Z63cc
Introduction: This book includes the research work on Chinese immigration and the Chinese American community. The author, Min Zhou, has painstakingly researched aspects of the expereince of Chinese immigrants and more broadly, Asian immigrants, in America, placing her results within a theoretical framework. She has advanced both our factual knowledge of Asian-origin groups in America and general scientific knowledge about the process of immigrant adaptation and incorporation into the developed world. This piece of work involves the theories of ethnic enclaves, segmented assimilation, and transnationalism, advancing novel ideas and empirical results. Overall, this book presents a comprehensive collection of major articles on the determinants and consequences of contemporary Chinese immigration to America. It is required reading for specialists in immigration and ethnicity – and of interest and value for the general public as well.
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