Gordon H. Chang is Professor of History and Olive H. Palmer Professor in Humanities at Stanford University and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He is the author of Ghosts of Gold Mountain: The Epic Story of the Chinese Who Built the Transcontinental Railroad (2019) and coeditor of The Chinese and the Iron Road: Building the Transcontinental Railroad (Stanford, 2019), among other books.
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Introduction: Toward an Intellectual Memoir Part I: War 1. JFK, China, and the Bomb 2. Eisenhower and Mao's China 3. Chinese Americans and China: A Troubled and Complicated Relationship 4. Whose "Barbarism"? Whose "Treachery"?: Race and Civilization in the Unknown United States-Korea War of 1871 5. China and the Pursuit of America's Destiny: Nineteenth-Century Imagining and Why Immigration Restriction Took So Long Part II: Race 6. "Superman Is About to Visit the Relocation Centers" and the Limits of Wartime Liberalism 7. Social Darwinism Versus Social Engineering: The "Education" of Japanese Americans During World War II 8. Asian Americans and Politics: Some Perspectives from History 9. Chinese Railroad Workers and the U.S. Transcontinental Railroad in Global Perspective 10. History and Postmodernism Part III: Culture 11. Emerging from the Shadows: The Visual Arts and Asian American History 12. Chinese Painting Comes to America: Zhang Shuqi and the Diplomacy of Art 13. America's Dong Kingman-Dong Kingman's America 14. The Many Sides of Happy Lim: aka Hom Ah Wing, Lin Jian Fu, Happy Lum, Lin Chien Fu, Hom Yen Chuck, Lam Kin Foo, Lum Kin Foo, Hom, Lim Goon Wing, Lim Gin Foo, Gin Foo Lin, Koon Wing Lim, Henry Chin, Lim Ying Chuck, Lim Ah Wing, et al. 15. The Life and Death of Dhan Gopal Mukerji Appendix: Selected Work Acknowledgments Notes Biographical Note

