Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Golden Age of Racial Surveillance
- 2 Sorting Identity
- 3 Imperial Mimesis
- 4 The Racialisation of British Women during the Long Nineteenth Century
- 5 Linking Caste and Surveillance
- 6 Surveillance in South Africa
- 7 Israel/Palestine, North America, and Surveillance
- 8 Colonialism’s Uneasy Legacy
- 9 China’s Surveillance and Repression in Xinjiang
- 10 Asian Americans as “the Perpetual Foreigner” under Scrutiny
- 11 The Great White Father and His Little Red Children
- 12 In a Most Excellent and Perfect Order
- 13 Surveillance and Public Schools
- 14 Surveillance and Preventing Violent Extremism
- 15 Resistance and the Politics of Surveillance and Control
- 16 Surveilled Subjects and Technologically Mediated Law Enforcement
10 - Asian Americans as “the Perpetual Foreigner” under Scrutiny
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 February 2023
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The Golden Age of Racial Surveillance
- 2 Sorting Identity
- 3 Imperial Mimesis
- 4 The Racialisation of British Women during the Long Nineteenth Century
- 5 Linking Caste and Surveillance
- 6 Surveillance in South Africa
- 7 Israel/Palestine, North America, and Surveillance
- 8 Colonialism’s Uneasy Legacy
- 9 China’s Surveillance and Repression in Xinjiang
- 10 Asian Americans as “the Perpetual Foreigner” under Scrutiny
- 11 The Great White Father and His Little Red Children
- 12 In a Most Excellent and Perfect Order
- 13 Surveillance and Public Schools
- 14 Surveillance and Preventing Violent Extremism
- 15 Resistance and the Politics of Surveillance and Control
- 16 Surveilled Subjects and Technologically Mediated Law Enforcement
Summary
Asian Americans play a prominent role in the state surveillance story, because Asian Americans play an ambiguous role in both international relations and domestic race relations.4 Although people of Asian descent have been arriving in the Americas since before the Civil War – Asian soldiers fighting on both sides of the internecine conflict – Asian immigrants and their American-born descendants, whatever their formal status and however assimilated, have been portrayed as “sojourners” only temporarily resident in the United States and likely to return to a homeland to which they have remained stealthily loyal.5 The persistent theme has been that Asians are inassimilable into American society, whether by biology, culture, or their own collective choices. The assumption that it is contradictory to be both Asian and American has been used, explicitly and implicitly, to justify discrimination against Asian Americans.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Handbook of Race and Surveillance , pp. 190 - 222Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023
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