ASAM paper
Xinyu Shang
ASAM 100AA
Week 9 Reading Journal
The main theme across all these weekly journals is the lives of Asian
communities, specifically the Chinese American community in the United States. The
articles have highlighted the Chinese culture, food, and cuisines, challenges, and
opportunities for Chinese students in the United States as well as the issues of Chinese
immigrants and how it has affected most families in the Asian communities. It is
interesting to understand from the articles readings that in the recent years, as a result of
the increase in the growth rate of Chinese Americans in the United States, several ethnic
districts popularly known as Chinatowns have recently emerged in cities such as Los
Angeles, Houston, New York as well as San Francisco. Chinese American
businesspeople have also emerged in these towns offering services like Chinese
education programs, classes, and advice to both the middle-class and the immigrants.
This is a clear indication of the involvement of the ethnic economy from the diverse
Chinese American communities.
The journals have also established that a substantial number of members of the
Chinese population in the United States have experienced a great deal of upward
mobility. The authors have approached this aspect of the Chinese community from a
distinct perspective and asses the manner in which such mobility was made possible. The
readings have also made a clear observation that research studies, as well as statistics
conducted, indicate that the whole community of the Chinese population in the US has
been successful at a rapid pace when compared to other ethnic populations. This success
has been attributed to the internal workings as well as the inner dynamics of the Chinese
American community. Further, the journals have also outlined that as a result of
hostilities together with violence the Chinese immigration had been slowed down and the
immigrants had been forced out of the job market. Before the Second World War,
ethnicity tended to determine most social relationships more than class.
More so, the interesting aspect of the journals is that the authors have used class
evaluation to reveal the other side of the Chinese communities’ experiences apart from
the mobility success that has been achieved. The readings have included the challenges
of normal day survival of the Chinese students, laborers as well as entrepreneurs and how
this has affected their position in the social hierarchy. The great amount of immigrant
workers inflow has allowed the expansion of the Chinese economy, in which the business
people can be able to maintain their advantage and compete favorably with the other
ethnic communities in the United States. The Chinese workers do not have the
mainstream into the job market as a result legal regulations. Most Chinese students are
being accused of paying other individuals to write their academic work and this is done in
such a way that it can never be proven through the college standards. This is the wrong
profiling of the Chinese American students because these students survive completely on
savings from their parents, with little or nothing left for the future and hence, they cannot
afford to endanger their education.