From the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to the Immigration Act of 1924 to
Japanese American internment during World War II, the United States has
a long history of anti-Asian policies. But Lon Kurashige demonstrates
that despite widespread racism, Asian exclusion was not the product of
an ongoing national consensus; it was a subject of fierce debate. This
book complicates the exclusion story by examining the organized and
well-funded opposition to discrimination that involved some of the most
powerful public figures in American politics, business, religion, and
academia. In recovering this opposition, Kurashige explains the rise and
fall of exclusionist policies through an unstable and protracted
political rivalry that began in the 1850s with the coming of Asian
immigrants, extended to the age of exclusion from the 1880s until the
1960s, and since then has shaped the memory of past discrimination.
In this first book-length analysis of both sides of the debate,
Kurashige argues that exclusion-era policies were more than just
enactments of racism; they were also catalysts for U.S.-Asian
cooperation and the basis for the twenty-first century's tightly
integrated Pacific world.