Xiaojing Zhou

Cities of Others


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petitioned the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, “demanding that something be done about the Chinese quarter of the city, described as being crowded and contaminated with disease.” Ultimately, the petitioners wanted the board to “‘provide some means of removing the Chinese beyond the city limits’” (McClain 44). White Americans’ concerted efforts to drive the Chinese out of the city continued into the early decades of the twentieth century. On May 31, 1900, the San Francisco newspaper Morning Call published an article calling for the elimination of Chinatown from the city: “In no city in the civilized world is there a slum more foul or more menacing than that which now threatens us with the Asiatic plague. Chinatown occupies the very heart of San Francisco. . . . The only way to get rid of that menace is to eradicate Chinatown from the city” (qtd. in McClain 44). As documented by Jean Pfaelzer in her well-researched study Driven Out: The Forgotten War against Chinese Americans (2007), such epistemological violence in constructing the abject identity of Chinatown provoked physical violence aimed at driving the Chinese out.

      It is precisely the simultaneous disavowal and reinforcement of racial inequality in discourses on commoditized cultural diversity that render both Chinatown and the “American” city contested spaces. The complexity and ambivalence of Chinatown in its relation to the city underlie the debates in Asian American studies over its identities as a segregated ghetto or dynamic ethnic enclave. Elaine H. Kim contends in her groundbreaking study Asian American Literature: An Introduction to the Writings and Their Social Context (1982): “Chinatown life was largely organized around the needs of these womanless, childless men who had been segregated from participation in the mainstream of American life by race discrimination” (91). Asian American sociologists have called into question the portrayal of Chinatown as a segregated ghetto of the “bachelor society” resulting from racial exclusion. Historian Yong Chen argues in his study Chinese San Francisco, 1850–1943 (2000) that to “view Chinatown simply as a segregated urban ethnic enclave created by a hostile environment” would hinder “our ability to see the internal vitality of Chinatown” (47). He contends: “Racial prejudice affected but never totally dictated the lives of the immigrants. Chinatown’s longevity most clearly underscores its defiance of anti-Chinese forces that persistently tried but failed to eradicate or dislocate this large visible Chinese community from the heart of the city” (47). Chen emphasizes that San Francisco’s Chinatown is “a social and cultural center” and “a Pacific Rim community” (48, 7). In a similar vein, sociologist Min Zhou notes that “New York City’s Chinatown emerged as a direct result of the anti-Chinese campaign on the West Coast and the Chinese Exclusion Act” (6). But she emphasizes that New York City’s Chinatown has undergone profound changes and calls for more attention to “the bright face of this dynamic community” as an “urban enclave” where there are “signs of prosperity, hope, and solidarity everywhere” (8, 6, 8).