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MARC Record from marc_nuls

Record ID marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:236094000:5192
Source marc_nuls
Download Link /show-records/marc_nuls/NULS_PHC_180925.mrc:236094000:5192?format=raw

LEADER: 05192pam 2200373 a 4500
001 9919845600001661
005 20150423123104.0
008 990427s1999 caua b 001 0deng
010 $a 99031772
020 $a0520208706 (alk. paper)
020 $a0520218604 (alk. paper)
035 $a(CSdNU)u81547-01national_inst
035 $a(Sirsi) l99031772
035 $a(Sirsi) l99031772
035 $a(Sirsi) 01-AAI-8529
035 $a 99031772
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dNhCcYBP$dOrPss
043 $an-us-ca
050 00 $aF 869 S39$bC597 1999
100 1 $aYung, Judy.
245 10 $aUnbound voices :$ba documentary history of Chinese women in San Francisco /$cJudy Yung.
260 $aBerkeley :$bUniversity of California Press,$cc1999.
300 $axv, 543 p. :$bill. ;$c23 cm.
500 $aIncludes index.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 $aLessons from My Mother's Past: Researching Chinese Women's Immigration History -- Chin Lung's Affidavit, May 14, 1892 -- Leong Shee's Testimony, April 18, 1893 -- Leong Shee's Testimony, July 24, 1929 -- Jew Law Ying's Coaching Book -- Jew Law Ying's and Yung Hin Sen's Testimonies, April 2-3, 1941 -- Oral History Interview with Jew Law Ying -- Bound Feet: Chinese Women in the Nineteenth Century -- Images of Women in Chinese Proverbs: "A Woman without Talent Is Virtuous" -- Kwong King You, Sau Saang Gwa: "If I Could Just See Him One More Time" -- A Stain on the Flag / M. G. C. Edholm -- Confession of a Chinese Slave-Dealer: How She Bought Her Girls, Smuggled Them into San Francisco, and Why She Has Just Freed Them / Helen Grey -- The Chinese Woman in America / Sui Seen [Sin] Far -- Worse Than Slaves: Servitude of All Chinese Wives / Louise A. Littleton -- Mary Tape, an Outspoken Woman: "Is It a Disgrace to Be Born a Chinese?" -- Unbound Feet: Chinese Immigrant Women, 1902-1929 -- Sieh King King, China's Joan of Arc: "Men and Women Are Equal and Should Enjoy the Privileges of Equals" -- Madame Mai's Speech: "How Can It Be That They Look upon Us as Animals?" -- No More Footbinding (Anonymous) -- Wong Ah So, Filial Daughter and Prostitute: "The Greatest Virtue in Life Is Reverence to Parents" -- Law Shee Low, Model Wife and Mother: "We Were All Good Women--Stayed Home and Sewed" -- Jane Kwong Lee, Community Worker: "Devoting My Best to What Needed to Be Done" -- The Purpose of the Chinese Women's Jeleab Association / Liu Yilan -- First Steps: The Second Generation, 1920s -- The Oriental Girl in the Occident, by One of the "Second Generation" -- Manifestations of Modern Influences on Second Generation Chinese / Miss Rose Chew -- Alice Sue Fun, World Traveler: "A Rebel at Heart" -- Rose Yuen Ow, Cabaret Dancer: "I've Lived a Full Life" -- Tiny / Tye Leung Schulze -- Some Rambling Thoughts on Why I Am a Christian / Florence Chinn Kwan -- Story of a Chinese College Girl (The Conflict between the Old and the Young) / Esther Wong -- Flora Belle Jan, Flapper and Writer: "I Long for Unconventionality and Freedom" -- Gladys Ng Gin, Cocktail Waitress: "That's What Happens When You're Illiterate" -- Long Strides: The Great Depression, 1930s -- Ethel Lum, Social Worker: "Careful Social Planning Needed" -- Jane Kwong Lee, Community Worker: "A Richer Life for All" -- Wong See Chan, Hardworking Wife and Mother: "The 1930s Were the Hardest" -- Eva Lowe, Fighter for the Underdog: "You Have to Stand Up for Your Rights: Nobody Will Give You Anything for Nothing" -- Alice Fong Yu, Schoolteacher and Community Organizer: "I Wanted to Help People, Not Run Their Lives" -- Sue Ko Lee and the 1938 National Dollar Stores Strike: "It Changed Our Lives" -- In Step: The War Years, 1931-1945 -- Women's Role in the War of Resistance: "Everyone, Man and Woman, Has a Responsibility in the Rise and Fall of a Nation" -- Lady P'ing Yu on War: "Women, Show Your Stuff" -- Jane Kwong Lee, Community Worker: "To Save Our Motherland and Promote Our Status as Women" -- Dr. Margaret Chung and the Fair-Haired Bastards Club: "Necessity Is the Mother of Invention" -- Chinese in the United States Today: The War Has Changed Their Lives / Rose Hum Lee -- Marinship Chinese Workers Are Building Ships to Free Their Home Land / Constance Wong [Jade Snow Wong] -- May Lew Gee, Shipyard Worker: "I Was a Tacker on the Graveyard Shift" -- Ruth Chan Jang, U.S. Air Corps Corporal: "I Would Love to Be Buried at Arlington" -- Lai Yee Guey and Lorena How, Mother and Daughter: "Making Marks for Heaven" -- Giving Voice to Chinese American Women: Oral History Methodology.
650 0 $aChinese American women$zCalifornia$zSan Francisco$xHistory$vSources.
650 0 $aChinese American women$zCalifornia$zSan Francisco$xSocial conditions $vSources.
650 0 $aWomen immigrants$zCalifornia$zSan Francisco$xHistory$vSources.
650 0 $aChinese American women$zCalifornia$zSan Francisco$vBiography.
651 0 $aSan Francisco (Calif.)$xSocial conditions$vSources.
651 0 $aSan Francisco (Calif.)$xEthnic relations$vSources.
948 $a02/09/2000$b02/16/2000
999 $aF 869 S39 C597 1999$wLC$c1$i31786101161070$d8/25/2010$e8/18/2010 $f2/25/2004$g1$lCIRCSTACKS$mNULS$n6$rY$sY$tBOOK$u6/11/2003