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  • John Doe Chinaman A Forgotten History of Chinese Life under American Racial Law (Not yet available Publication Sept. 2025)

John Doe Chinaman A Forgotten History of Chinese Life under American Racial Law (Not yet available Publication Sept. 2025)

SKU: 9780674294110
$39.00
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Beth Lew-Williams

Harvard University Press: 2025

Hardcover: New

376 pages, 33 photos, 2 maps, 4 illus.

9780674294110


Drawing on dozens of archives across the US West, John Doe Chinaman reveals the depth of anti-Chinese discrimination beyond federal exclusion and tells the stories of those who refused to accept a conditional place in American life.


Legal discrimination against Chinese people in the United States began in 1852, when California passed a tax on foreign gold miners that was explicitly designed to exploit Chinese labor. Over the next seventy years, officials in California, Oregon, Washington, and other western states instituted more than five thousand laws that marginalized and controlled their Chinese residents. Long before the Chinese Exclusion Act banned Chinese immigration, these laws constrained the activities and opportunities of Chinese people already living in the United States.

 

In this eye-opening account, Beth Lew-Williams describes a legal architecture redolent of Jim Crow but tailored specifically to people often referred to only as “John Doe Chinaman” or “Mary Chinaman” in official records. Enforced by police and tax collectors, but also by schoolteachers, missionaries, and neighbors, these laws granted the Chinese only limited access to American society, falling far short of equality or belonging. Cementing stereotypes of Chinese residents as criminals, invaders, and predators, they regulated everything from healthcare to education, property ownership, business formation, and kinship customs. Yet in the face of these limitations, Chinese communities reacted resourcefully. Many fought, evaded, and manipulated these laws, finding ways to maintain their prohibited traditions, resist unfair treatment in court, and insist on their political rights.

 

Author Beth Lew-Williams is Professor of History and Director of the Program in Asian American Studies at Princeton University. She is the author of The Chinese Must Go: Violence, Exclusion, and the Making of the Alien in America. 

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  • home
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    • subscribe to our newsletter!
    • contact us >
      • FAQ
    • eastwind books multicultural services >
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  • published by eastwind
  • asian & asian american literature
    • chinese & diasporic literature
    • japanese & diasporic literature
    • korean & diasporic literature
    • filipinx & diasporic literature
    • southeast asian & diasporic literature
    • south asian & diasporic literature
  • asian american studies
    • chinese american studies
    • filipino american studies
    • japanese american studies
    • korean american studies
    • south asian american studies
    • s.w.a.n.a & diasporic literature
    • southeast asian american studies
  • ethnic studies
    • african american studies
    • chicanx/latinx studies
    • native american studies
    • pacific islander am. studies
  • ethnic literature
    • african american literature
    • chicanx/latinx literature
    • native american literature
    • pacific islander am. literature
  • poetry
    • new poetry: 2020-present
    • african american poetry
    • chinese & diasporic poetry
    • filipino american poetry
    • japanese american poetry
    • south asian & diasporic poetry
    • korean american poetry
    • native american poetry
    • pacific islander poetry
    • southeast asian american poetry
    • anthologies & journals
  • science fiction & fantasy
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    • board books
    • african american children's books
    • latinx children's books
    • S.W.A.N.A. / Middle Eastern Children's books
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    • filipinx american children's books
    • japanese american children's books
    • korean children's books
    • south asian children's books
    • southeast asian children's books
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