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                    " Outsider Crossings: "
                    Chang, Jason Oliver
                    Choy, Catherine C
 
 
            
                
                    | Document Type | : | Latin Dissertation |  
                    | Language of Document | : | English |  
                    | Record Number | : | 915883 |  
                    | Doc. No | : | TL9pc5f6zm |  
                    | Main Entry | : | Chang, Jason Oliver |  
                    | Title & Author | : | Outsider Crossings:\  Chang, Jason OliverChoy, Catherine C |  
                    | College | : | UC Berkeley |  
                    | Date | : | 2010 |  
                    | student score | : | 2010 |  
                    | Abstract | : | Founded at the turn of the twentieth century, the irrigated colony at Mexicali, Baja California was established by Chinese farmers and merchants as a cotton-growing enclave.  This dissertation recuperates the marginalized history of this community's development and uncovers why this historical narrative has been erased.  I use a diverse array of U.S. and Mexican archival sources to examine the frontiers of U.S. imperialism, explore Mexican racial formations, and trace changes to a trans-national Chinese community.Through different types of historical evidence I make four arguments.  First, that a trans-Pacific conceptual framework helps to better understand the role that Chinese communities played in the formation of the U.S.-Mexico border.  I details how the conquest of Mexico and imperial aggression in East Asia allowed the U.S. to usurp the colonial circuits of the trans-Pacific Spanish Galleon trade.  Through the simultaneous assault in Asia and Mexico the Pacific became crossed with pathways that encouraged the Chinese to settle in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands.  Second, that migrating Chinese merchants and farmers were central to the development of Mexicali. I illustrate how their expertise in China's cotton industry prepared them well to turn the desert border region into an irrigated colony.  I trace their transnational geographies and social networks of this diasporic Chinese community in order to show how Mexicali became a Chinese place.  Third, I contend that the racial boundaries of post-Revolutionary Mexican nationalism considered the Chinese community in Mexicali an immanent threat.  I describe how definitions of what the one-time president, Abelardo Rodriguez, called "genuine Mexican colonization" racially segregated the economic development and political integration of Baja California.  Lastly, I demonstrate how a series of racial programs of Mexicanización sought to undermine the Chinese community and expunge them from historical narratives of the region.  Baja California historiography, Mexicali's public spaces, and a museum illustrate different modes of erasure and reconfiguration in narratives about the history of Mexicali's Chinese community. |  
                    | Added Entry | : | Choy, Catherine C |  
                    | Added Entry | : | UC Berkeley |  |  |