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From Yellow Peril to Model Minority: Shifting Discourses of Chinese Immigration during the Cold War
Lecture by
 
Madeline Hsu, Professor of History, University of Texas-Austin

Madeline Hsu photo
After World War II, American conservatives promoted more positive views of Chinese immigration to advance the anti-communist cause. The nonprofit organization, Aid Chinese Refugee Intellectuals Inc., attempted to funnel educated, intellectual Chinese away from the communist PRC and toward "Free China," democratic allies, and the United States itself.  Over the course of the 1950s and 1960s, this move towards viewing Chinese less as the "yellow peril" and more as political allies, and economic resources in the war on communism, contributed to the dramatic changes in immigration law usually associated with the 1965 Immigration Act.

Sponsored by Pomona's Department of History and PBI.
Contact: (909) 607-3075
 
When and Where:

Friday, November 13 at 4:15 p.m.
Hahn 108
(420 Harvard Ave., Hahn Bldg., Claremont)

Pacific Basin Institute at Pomona College
420 Harvard Ave.
Claremont, California 91711