Anna May Wong and Hazel Ying Lee--Two Second Generation Chinese American Women in World War II

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2012

Authors

Sui, Qianyu

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Oregon

Abstract

Applying a historical approach which contextualizes ethnic and gender perspectives, this thesis investigates the obstacles that second-generation Chinese American women encountered as they moved into the public sphere. This included sexual restraints at home and racial harassment outside. This study examines, as well, the opportunities that stimulated these women to break from their confinements. Anna May Wong and Hazel Ying Lee will serve as two role models among this second generation of women who successfully combined their cultural heritage with their education in the U.S. Their contributions inspired a whole generation of young bi-cultural women of their time. I will argue that, although the second generation had gone through cultural acculturation and resistance toward American mainstream culture, they constructed their new Chinese American identity during World War II through a synthesis of their contribution to the gender relations and ethnic identification in nationalist project.

Description

Keywords

Anna May Wong, Chinese American Women, Ethnicity, Feminism, Hazel Ying Lee, Second-generation

Citation