学位论文详细信息
National Borders, Neighborhood Boundaries: Gender, Space and Border Formation in Chinese and Mexican Los Angeles, 1871-1938.
Borderlands and Racial Segregation;Race;Class;Gender and Nation;Comparative Ethnic Studies;Humanities;History
Quintana, Isabella Seong-LeongStern, Alexandra ;
University of Michigan
关键词: Borderlands and Racial Segregation;    Race;    Class;    Gender and Nation;    Comparative Ethnic Studies;    Humanities;    History;   
Others  :  https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/handle/2027.42/78955/isaq_1.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
瑞士|英语
来源: The Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship
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【 摘 要 】

A study of the plaza area in the city of Los Angeles, this dissertation explores how national borders were mapped onto neighborhood geographies in the making of a racially segregated urban landscape. From the 1870s through the 1930s, the plaza area was home to Mexicans, Chinese and others who played varying roles in the formation of community. Places that came to be known as ;;Chinatown” and ;;Sonoratown” became not only sites of racial difference but also locations that were designated ;;foreign” districts; thus, they were located ideologically outside of the geopolitical borders of the U.S. nation-state despite their location within U.S. territory. I argue that the U.S. conquest of former Mexican territories, deportation campaigns, Mexican repatriation, and Chinese exclusion were simultaneous processes of border formation that affected the social relationships of Los Angeles residents.In the making of what I call the ;;urban borderlands,” multiracial social and spatial configurations of plaza area neighborhoods were shaped not only by the racialization of places known as ;;Chinatown” and ;;Sonoratown” but also by the shifting locations and meanings of U.S. nation-state borders, including at times immigration exclusion.Linking race, class, gender and nation, this study offers an understanding of community formation in the context of rapid industrialization and modernization. Plaza area residents made meaning of their local geography through conflicts over space, limited resources, exclusion and deportation movements, and industrialization.Through spatial and material culture analyses of public spaces, home spaces, and city geography, this thesis shows how architecture and street spaces might be used to understand the social relationships of Mexican and Chinese residents.In doing so, it examines the different and sometimes opposing spatial imaginaries of Mexican and Chinese residents, reformers, city officials, and city boosters.By examining both pivotal events in which Chinese and Mexican bodies were removed from urban space, and the everyday lives of these residents, this study contributes to a new understanding of working-class, immigrant and urban U.S. history, as well as Chicana/o and Asian American Studies.In doing so, it illuminates how U.S. global imperialism took on local manifestations in places such as Los Angeles.

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