Guest Editors' Preface

E. Tang, L. Wong
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Abstract

In moments of crisis that test the stability of US nationalism—the civil war, the expansion of American empire, World Wars I & II, the civil rights era, the post-industrial era, 9/11, COVID—a pattern of violence against Asian Americans seems to make an appearance. Nearly a third of the nurses who have died of coronavirus in the United States are Filipino, even though Filipino nurses make up just 4% of the nursing population nationwide.2 Over 1.2 million Asian Americans labor in food-related industries nationwide—at farms, food processing factories, grocery stores, and restaurants—and are placed at higher risk of infection and mortality.3 In the spring of 2021, in the span of two months, lone white gunmen murdered Asian Americans in Atlanta, Indianapolis, and San Jose (all of the victims were essential service workers). In presenting the data, Wong and Liu invite us to consider how anti-Black tropes and invocations of a persistent "Black-Asian conflict" diverted attention away from the role of white supremacy in fomenting an anti-Asian climate. The new White House immediately promised to "Build Back Better" with a sweeping plan to restore domestic stability and the nation's reputation abroad;implied was the beating back of Trumpian revanchism.
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特邀编辑序言
在考验美国民族主义稳定性的危机时刻——内战、美帝国的扩张、第一次和第二次世界大战、民权时代、后工业时代、9/11、新冠肺炎——针对亚裔美国人的暴力模式似乎出现了。在美国死于冠状病毒的护士中,近三分之一是菲律宾人,尽管菲律宾护士只占全国护理人口的4%全国有超过120万亚裔美国人在与食品相关的行业工作——在农场、食品加工厂、杂货店和餐馆——他们被置于较高的感染和死亡风险中2021年春天,在两个月的时间里,亚特兰大、印第安纳波利斯和圣何塞的亚裔美国人被白人持枪杀害(所有受害者都是基本服务工作者)。在展示这些数据时,黄和刘邀请我们思考,反黑人的比喻和对持续不断的“黑亚冲突”的援引,是如何转移了人们对白人至上主义在煽动反亚洲气氛中的作用的注意力的。新一届白宫立即承诺要“重建得更好”,推出一项全面计划,以恢复国内稳定和美国在海外的声誉;这暗示着要打击特朗普式的复仇主义。
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