"Hinnershitz takes an innovative approach to the people whom Americans generally regarded as non-American other. This is a welcome innovation in the research on the civil rights movement."
"An innovative contribution to Asian American studies and 'long civil rights movement' historiography … Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."
"An engaging narrative that takes up the intersection of race, religion, and civil rights and that includes subjects and themes that often have been overlooked or not been taken into account comparatively."
"With increasing numbers of Asian international students on U.S. campuses, this timely study convincingly shows how such students have long been central to Asian American history and civil rights movements."
"Hinnershitz's work is timely and important to consider, especially given the current landscape of Asian international student populations on many of our college campuses and their subsequent developing identities as racialized bodies."
"Hinnershitz's study is...a welcome addition to the historiography of Asian American activism, emphasizing their place in the long and 'wide,' in Mark Brilliant's formulation, history of the Civil Rights Movement."
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
1 “Western People Are Not All Angels”: Encountering Racism on the West Coast
2 A Problem by Any Other Name: Christian Student Associations, the “Second-Generation Problem,” and West Coast Racism
3 “We Ask Not for Mercy, but for Justice”: Filipino Students and the Battle for Labor and Civil Rights
4 “A Sweet-and-Sour World”: The Second Sino-Japanese War, Christian Citizenship, and Equality
5 Christian Citizenship and Japanese American Incarceration during World War II
6 Christian Social Action in the Postwar Era
Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
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