第二次世界大战前美国的亚裔和亚裔美国妇女

S. Hune
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摘要

从19世纪40年代到20世纪30年代,作为逃避帝国战争、殖民主义和家园混乱的全球移民运动的一部分,亚洲女性作为移民一代进入了夏威夷,当时夏威夷是一个王国,后来成为美国的领土,以及美国西部大陆。大多数是来自中国、日本、韩国、菲律宾和南亚的妻子或假新娘,她们加入了为摆脱贫困和冲突而在海外工作的男人的行列。女性也独立到达;一些在东海岸。美国移民法限制亚洲男性劳工的入境,也限制了亚洲女性。亚裔女性对于建立亚裔美国家庭、确保此类家庭的生存和社会流动性至关重要。她们在种植园、农田和罐头厂工作,担任家仆和女裁缝,帮助经营家族企业,同时做家务、抚养孩子,并应对文化差异。与传统相比,她们的活动赋予了女性在家庭中的更多权力,并将性别角色转向更平等的家庭。妇女组织和妇女的领导、思想和技能促进了民族社区的形成。第二代(在美国出生的)亚裔美国女性成长于19世纪末和20世纪初,她们在代际差异和文化差异之间讨价还价。有些是混合种族,即混血儿或多种族。他们无法参与美国青年文化的许多方面,于是成立了以种族为基础的俱乐部和组织,举办反映主流社会的社会活动。有些人上了大学。一些人在专业上有了新的突破。亚洲妇女和亚裔美国妇女在国籍、阶级和地域上各不相同。这两代人在教育、就业和公共空间方面都面临种族和性别的界限,他们积极参与公民事务,以改善他们的生活和社区的福祉。在美国各地,他们游行、发表演讲、筹集资金,将自己的家园从外国占领中解放出来,并在法庭、工作场所和其他地方争取种族和性别平等。
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Asian and Asian American Women in the United States before World War II
Asian women, the immigrant generation, entered Hawai’i, when it was a kingdom and subsequently a US territory, and the Western US continent, from the 1840s to the 1930s as part of a global movement of people escaping imperial wars, colonialism, and homeland disorder. Most were wives or picture brides from China, Japan, Korea, the Philippines, and South Asia, joining menfolk who worked overseas to escape poverty and strife. Women also arrived independently; some on the East Coast. US immigration laws restricting the entry of Asian male laborers also limited Asian women. Asian women were critical for establishing Asian American families and ensuring such households’ survival and social mobility. They worked on plantations, in agricultural fields and canneries, as domestics and seamstresses, and helped operate family businesses, while doing housework, raising children, and navigating cultural differences. Their activities gave women more power in their families than by tradition and shifted gender roles toward more egalitarian households. Women’s organizations, and women’s leadership, ideas, and skills contributed to ethnic community formation. Second generation (US-born) Asian American women grew up in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and negotiated generational as well as cultural differences. Some were mixed race, namely, biracial or multiracial. Denied participation in many aspects of American youth culture, they formed ethnic-based clubs and organizations and held social activities that mirrored mainstream society. Some attended college. A few broke new ground professionally. Asian and Asian American women were diverse in national origin, class, and location. Both generations faced race and gender boundaries in education, employment, and public spaces, and they were active in civic affairs to improve their lives and their communities’ well-being. Across America, they marched, made speeches, and raised funds to free their homelands from foreign occupation and fought for racial and gender equality in the courts, workplaces, and elsewhere.
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