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Memories of a Future Home
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Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments ix Preface xiii Introduction: Diasporic Citizenship 1 1. Prohibited Race/Ideal Citizens: The Social History and Background of the Chinese in Panama 33 2. The Queen of the Chinese Colony: Contesting Nationalism, En-Gendering Diaspora 54 3. Migration Stories: Serial Migration and the Production of Home and Identity in Diaspora 86 4. Home at the Intersection of Nations: Between Panama, China, and the United States 113 5. Immigrant Dreams and Nightmares: Remaking Community Amid New Migrations 136 6. "Good-bye, Uncle Sam, Hello, Uncle Chang": Globalization, the China- Taiwan Conflict, and the Racialization of Chineseness 164 Conclusion: Toward a Framework for the Study of Asians in the Americas 195 Epilogue: "The Chinese Century"--Redefining Panamanian National Identity 209 Notes 215 References 227 Index 241

About the Author

Lok C. D. Siu is Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Asian/Pacific/American Studies at New York University.

Reviews

"At the heart of Lok Siu's engaging, well-researched book about Chinese Panamanians is the question of what it means to be Chinese in a diaspora. Siu makes a major contribution to international migration and Chinese oversees studies by developing the theoretical concept of 'diasporic citizenship.' Rather than taking for granted a coherent, homogenized 'Chinese diaspora,' Siu demonstrates its complexities and disjunctures." - Journal of Chinese Oversees "[The] theoretical framework of this ethnography, of diasporic citizenship and the fluidity of culture and identities (albeit firmly embedded in power relations), should represent a point of departure for a fuller and perhaps more inclusive discussion of the intersections of culture and politics in the hemisphere as a whole."Journal of Latin American Studies "Memories of a Future Home is a masterful ethnography, focusing specifically on the different groups of Chinese in Panama and their ongoing negotiations regarding identity, nationality, and home. Proposing that these must be contextualized both in terms of the complexities of Panamanian politics and the global status of the country of origin, Siu makes a highly original contribution that illuminates the dynamics of cultural citizenship among 'new' and 'old' Asian immigrant populations in the Americas, as a whole." - Lane Ryo Hirabayashi, University of California, Riverside "Lok Siu's investigation of the Chinese in Panama is a unique entry in the ongoing investigation of the broader, globally significant processes of migration. This work illuminates some of the major conceptual debates in contemporary scholarship. The author's theoretically informed thick description makes this manuscript sing." - Ien Ang, University of Western Sydney "Lok Siu has written a fascinating story about the Chinese living in Panama, equally vulnerable to memories of home and the ruptures of nationalist politics. The notion of diasporic citizenship captures a kind of interstitial belonging shaped by cross-currents of culture and politics, most recently including ripples from emergent Asian powers." - Aihwa Ong, author of Flexible Citizenship, Buddha is Hiding, and Global Assemblages

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