November
17, 1999
Contact: Barbara McKenna (831) 459-2495; mckenna@cats.ucsc.edu
New book gives voice to the stories of Chinese American women
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SANTA CRUZ, CA — Expected to serve and obey without question, often
exploited as factory workers, indentured servants, or prostitutes,
Chinese women who immigrated to America in the early 20th century
were considered powerless over their own destiny. However, a new
book by historian Judy Yung, which gives voice to the unheard stories
of many of these women and their daughters, reveals lives lived
with fortitude, resilience, and great strength of character.
The book, titled Unbound Voices: A Documentary History of Chinese
Women in San Francisco (UC Press), depicts the history of Chinese
American women in a very moving and personal medium — their own
words.
Yung, an associate professor of American studies at the University
of California, Santa Cruz, tells two stories at once in her new
book: the social history of Chinese women in San Francisco from
the turn of the century through World War II and the personal tales
of 40 Chinese American women. Yung's compelling history unfolds
through oral histories, immigration interviews, newspaper articles,
letters, poems, autobiographies, speeches, and other sources.
Unbound Voices, a sequel to Yung's 1995 book, Unbound Feet (also
published by UC Press), uses the same structure as its award-winning
predecessor, beginning with the women who lived in China in the
19th century, progressing on to experiences of Chinese immigrant
women in San Francisco in the early 1900s, and those of their second-generation
daughters during the Great Depression and World War II.
Yung's book is already being hailed by critics,
who consider it an outstanding primary source-book for Asian
American and women's studies. The book succeeds in presenting
an insightful historical and socio-economic picture of life for
Chinese women in the first half of the 20th century that becomes
vivid through the personal experiences of the women who lived
during that time. "Just
as with Unbound Feet, I try to interweave text and context so that
this is not just a collection of voices," she explains.
Yung thought that when she completed Unbound
Feet, a ten- year project, she was done with the subject and
would move on to something else. But, she says, "I couldn't
put it to rest. I had all this rich material in the women's own
voices crying to be heard. When I realized this might be the
last time these stories will see the light of day, I decided
to do the second volume."
Yung herself was born in San Francisco to Chinese immigrants,
and the accounts of her mother, Jew Law Ying, are a compelling
part of the story. Like many women who came to the U.S. from China,
Jew Law Ying came with bright expectations that were quickly dashed.
"I cried a lot when I first came to Menlo Park," Jew
Law Ying recalls in her oral history. "So this was what Gold
Mountain was all about! So this was heaven! No bathtub, no icebox,
a wood- burning stove, no hot water. I wanted to go back to China
where we had servants to cook and to serve us, where I was happy
eating my grandfather's food and wearing my grandfather's clothes.
Here I had to do everything myself, including washing the laundry
by hand and fetching the firewood. It was a sorrowful three years."
Yung also includes a section on Chinese proverbs
that illustrate the prevailing attitudes toward women. Among
them, "a woman
without a husband is like a house without a roof beam"; "a
woman without talent is virtuous"; and "one good wife
guarantees three generations of good offspring." However,
as Yung explains, "Women always found ways to circumvent these
limited gender roles."
Women of various ages and occupations are included
in Yung's book, from the first wave of immigrants whose main
concern was survival to later generations grappling with assimilation
and racism. Eva Lowe tells Yung of her attempts to find work
during the Depression: "I
saw an ad that said they wanted to hire a seamstress on Third Street.
I remember I went over there and asked for the job. I had that
ad from the newspaper and she said, 'We don't hire Orientals.'
Not Chinese, but Orientals. I said, 'You have that ad there." She
told me, 'Well, I don't mind, but I don't think the workers would
be willing to work with you.' Now you cannot say that. You'll be
sued, right?"
A firsthand account from a missionary journal depicts another
common story. A daughter sold by her parents (in this case for
$450 Mexican dollars), Wong Ah So was brought to America as a wife
and then sold into prostitution. She was eventually rescued by
Donaldina Cameron of the Presbyterian Mission Home in San Francisco
and agreed to marry a Chinese merchant in Boise, Idaho. As interesting
as her own story is, so is the perspective Yung adds on how Wong
Ah So's attitude changes over time, from complete acceptance and
obedience to her parents and owners to a willingness later on to
challenge her husband's patriarchal values.
A former librarian, Yung is meticulous in her research, which
represents years spent in libraries, archives, and the homes of
the women she interviewed. Yung provides brief introductions to
each story for context but is careful to let the women speak for
themselves.
"We mediate so much as historians, trying
to put words in people's mouth, unknowingly influenced by our
own biases and agendas. But I have all this rich primary material.
Why not let the women tell their own stories in their own words?"
Yung will present a booksigning and reading on Thursday, January
6 at 7:30 p.m. at the Capitola Book Cafe. For information on the
reading, call (831) 462-4415.
Editor's note: For a review copy of the book or to interview Yung,
contact Barbara McKenna: (831) 459-2496; mckenna@cats.ucsc.edu
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