Jose M. Diego; LuisJ. Goicoechea; J. Ignacio González-Serrano; Javier Gorgas Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. KG (2010) Kovakantinen kirja
Stefano Boccaletti; Javier Burguete; Wenceslao Gonzalez-vinas; Hector L Mancini; Diego Leonardo Valladares World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd (2001) Kovakantinen kirja
Francisco Javier Díaz-Pérez; María Belén Díez-Bedmar; Paula García-Ramírez; Diego Rascón Moreno Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften (2013) Pehmeäkantinen kirja
The definitive account of transpacific Asian movement through the Spanish empire—from Manila to Acapulco and beyond—and its implications for the history of race and colonization in the Americas.
Between 1565 and 1815, the so-called Manila galleons enjoyed a near-complete monopoly on transpacific trade between Spain’s Asian and American colonies. Sailing from the Philippines to Mexico and back, these Spanish trading ships also facilitated the earliest migrations and displacements of Asian peoples to the Americas. Hailing from Gujarat, Nagasaki, and many places in between, both free and enslaved Asians boarded the galleons and made the treacherous transpacific journey each year. Once in Mexico, they became “chinos” within the New Spanish caste system.
Diego Javier Luis chronicles this first sustained wave of Asian mobility to the early Americas. Uncovering how and why Asian peoples crossed the Pacific, he sheds new light on the daily lives of those who disembarked at Acapulco. There, the term “chino” officially racialized diverse ethnolinguistic populations into a single caste, vulnerable to New Spanish policies of colonial control. Yet Asians resisted these strictures, often by forging new connections across ethnic groups. Social adaptation and cultural convergence, Luis argues, defined Asian experiences in the Spanish Americas from the colonial invasions of the sixteenth century to the first cries for Mexican independence in the nineteenth.
The First Asians in the Americas speaks to an important era in the construction of race, vividly unfolding what it meant to be “chino” in the early modern Spanish empire. In so doing, it demonstrates the significance of colonial Latin America to Asian diasporic history and reveals the fundamental role of transpacific connections to the development of colonial societies in the Americas.