Providing the most comprehensive examination to date of Asians in the
Centennial State, William Wei addresses a wide range of experiences,
from anti-Chinese riots in late nineteenth-century Denver to the World
War II incarceration of Japanese Americans at the Amache concentration
camp to the more recent influx of Southeast Asian refugees and South
Asian tech professionals. Drawing on a wealth of historical sources, Wei
reconstructs what life was like for the early Chinese and Japanese
pioneers, and he pays special attention to the different challenges
faced by those in urban versus rural areas. The result is a
groundbreaking approach that helps us better understand how Asians
survived--and thrived--in an often hostile environment.
Offering a fresh perspective on how cycles of persecution are repeated,
Wei reveals how the treatment of Asian Americans resonates with the
experiences of other marginalized groups in American society. His study
sheds light not only on the Asian American experience but also on the
development of Colorado and the greater American West.