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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-003.mrc:421469294:4445
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-003.mrc:421469294:4445?format=raw

LEADER: 04445mam a22004218a 4500
001 1445209
005 20220602035741.0
008 930519t19941994cau b s001 0 eng
010 $a 93004942
020 $a0520083377 (alk. paper)
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm28419067
035 $9AHW4920CU
035 $a(NNC)1445209
035 $a1445209
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dLDL
043 $an-us---
050 00 $aKF4757.5.C47$bM37 1994
082 00 $a346.7301/3$a347.30613$220
100 1 $aMcClain, Charles J.,$d1943-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n93047350
245 10 $aIn search of equality :$bthe Chinese struggle against discrimination in nineteenth-century America /$cCharles J. McClain.
260 $aBerkeley, Calif. :$bUniversity of California Press,$c[1994], ©1994.
300 $ax, 385 pages ;$c23 cm
336 $atext$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$2rdacarrier
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. 287-364) and indexes.
505 0 $aPt. I. The Beginnings of Discrimination and the First Chinese Responses. 1. California's First Anti-Chinese Laws. 2. Test Cases in the 1870s -- Pt. II. The Decade of the 1880s: Seeking the Equal Protection of the Laws. 3. The California Constitutional Contention and Its Aftermath. 4. The Laundry Litigation of the 1880s. 5. The Struggle for Access to the Schools -- Pt. III. The Decade of the 1880s: Court Contests with the Federal Government. 6. Federal Exclusion Act Litigation: The First Phase. 7. Seeking Federal Protection against Mob Violence: The Unusual Case of Baldwin v. Franks. 8. Federal Exclusion Act Litigation: The Second Phase -- Pt. IV. Century's End: Last Episodes of Sinophobia. 9. Challenging Residential Segregation: The Case of In re Lee Sing. 10. Medicine, Race, and the Law: The Bubonic Plague Outbreak of 1900.
520 $aThis illuminating volume probes the efforts of the Chinese community to battle the manifold kinds of discrimination encountered at the hands of government during the nineteenth century. Contrary to the stereotypical image of a passive, uninvolved, and insular group, the population revealed by Charles McClain is politically savvy and familiar with American political institutions, resentful of discriminatory treatment and capable of mobilizing to fight it.
520 8 $aHe draws on English- and Chinese-language documents, court files, and other sources to chronicle the ways the Chinese sought redress and change.
520 8 $aMcClain focuses on California, the home of the overwhelming majority of Chinese during the nineteenth century and the heart and hub of the anti-Chinese movement, and on the numerous cases the Chinese brought in the state and federal courts to vindicate their claim to equality of treatment under the law. In the 1862 case of Lin Sing v. Washburn, the California Supreme Court nullified a law imposing an onerous tax only on Chinese immigrants and aimed at discouraging Chinese immigration.
520 8 $aAn 1885 lawsuit by Joseph Tape, a Chinese parent, challenging the exclusion of Chinese children from the public schools, led to an order admitting his child. An 1890 measure attempted to remove San Francisco's Chinese residents from Chinatown and ghettoize them in a less desirable part of the city - the first attempt by an American municipality to segregate its inhabitants on the basis of race. Ten years later, after the discovery of suspected cases of bubonic plague in Chinatown, an attempt was made to force the Chinese to be inoculated with an experimental antiplague vaccine.
520 8 $aThese measures, too, were challenged by the Chinese and eventually struck down in the courts.
520 8 $aIn their battles for justice, the Chinese community helped to clarify a panoply of judicial issues, including the parameters of the Fourteenth Amendment and the legal meanings of nondiscrimination and equality. Discussing a wide-ranging set of court cases and gleaning their larger constitutional significance, In Search of Equality brings to light an important chapter of American cultural and ethnic history.
520 8 $aIt will attract attention from legal historians, scholars of Asian America, and historians of the American West.
650 0 $aChinese Americans$xLegal status, laws, etc.$xHistory.
852 00 $bglx$hKF4757.5.C47$iM37 1994
852 00 $bbar$hKF4757.5.C47$iM37 1994
852 00 $bbar$hKF4757.5.C47$iM37 1994