In the Jim Crow South, Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, and, later,
Vietnamese and Indian Americans faced obstacles similar to those
experienced by African Americans in their fight for civil and human
rights. Although they were not black, Asian Americans generally
were not considered white and thus were subject to school
segregation, antimiscegenation laws, and discriminatory business
practices. As Asian Americans attempted to establish themselves in
the South, they found that institutionalized racism thwarted their
efforts time and again. However, this book tells the story of their
resistance and documents how Asian American political actors and
civil rights activists challenged existing definitions of rights
and justice in the South.
From the formation of Chinese and Japanese communities in the early
twentieth century through Indian hotel owners' battles against
business discrimination in the 1980s and '90s, Stephanie
Hinnershitz shows how Asian Americans organized carefully
constructed legal battles that often traveled to the state and
federal supreme courts. Drawing from legislative and legal records
as well as oral histories, memoirs, and newspapers, Hinnershitz
describes a movement that ran alongside and at times intersected
with the African American fight for justice, and she restores Asian
Americans to the fraught legacy of civil rights in the South.