Chinese and Americans 作者:Guoqi Xu/徐国琦 出版社:Harvard University Press 副标题:A Shared History 出版年:2014-10-13 页数:352 定价:USD 41.00 装帧:Hardcover ISBN:9780674052536 豆瓣评分 评价人数不足 评价: 写笔记 写书评 加入购书单 分享到
作者:Xu Guoqi (徐国琦) 著 出版社:Harvard University Press 出版时间:2014-00-00 印刷时间:0000-00-00 页数:332 ISBN:9780674052536 ,购买Chinese and Americans: A Shared History 中国人与美国人:一部共有的历史 9780674052536等历史相关商品,欢迎您到孔夫子旧
The first and second groups included non-Mandarin Chinese speakers with or without "Pinyin"doi:10.4159/harvard.9780674736290Xu, GHarvard University PressXu, G. Q. (2014). Chinese and Americans: A Shared History. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. https://doi.org/10.4159/harvard....
Xu, Guoqi, Chinese and Americans: A Shared History 摘要: Z Fredman - 《中国历史学前沿:英文版》 被引量: 0发表: 2015年 Xu Guoqi.Chinese and Americans: A Shared History. Students of China-U.S. relations should be delighted to see the publication of a shared history of Chinese and America...
高清英文原版 Chinese and Americans,A Shared History 中國與美國: 共有的歷史 外语学习 英语资源 第12页 小木虫 论坛
摘要: Chinese and Americans: A Shared History. By Xu Guoqi ; foreword by Akira Iriye . Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014. Pp. 332. IBSN 10: 0674052536; IBSN 13: 978-0674052536. - Volume 15 Issue 1 - Beverley Hooper
Xu, Guoqi.Chinese and Americans: A Shared History主要由Zach Fredman编写,在2015年被《中国高等学校学术文摘·历史学》收录,原文总共4页。
where they showed a facility for finding gold. As a result, they encountered hostility and were gradually forced to leave the field and move to urban areas such asSan Francisco, where they were often confined to performing some of the dirtiest and hardest work. Americans in the West persisted...
we were considering how to ensure that more people would remember this history and promote the spirit of the Flying Tigers. Eventually, we decided to establish the Sino-American Aviation Heritage Foundation, with the aim of deepening Americans' understanding of this history and encouraging more young...
Chinatowns remained isolated and ignored by the American mainstream until after World War II. After the war, as the United States became a racially more open and tolerant society, emigration from the Chinatowns began. With new employment opportunities, a steady stream of Chinese Americans moved in...