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  • Contributors

Lalaie Ameeriar is an assistant professor of Asian American studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She earned a Ph.D. in Anthropology at Stanford University. She is working on a book that focuses on the transnational labor migration of Pakistani women to understand the politics of unemployment.

Gordon H. Chang is a professor of history at Stanford and studies American foreign relations, Asian American history, and their interconnections. He is the author of Friends and Enemies: The United States, China, and the Soviet Union, 1948-1972. He was the senior editor of Asian American Art: A History, 1850-1970.

Jason C. Chang received his Ph.D. from the Program in American Culture at the University of Michigan in 2010. He is currently at work on a book project titled Framing China: American Empire, Race, and U.S.-China Relations in the Long Twentieth Century. He currently teaches history at an independent high school in Lafayette, CA.

Donald Goellnicht is a professor in the Department of English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Canada. He has published widely on Asian North American literature and recently co-edited (with Stephen Sohn and Paul Lai) a special issue of Modern Fiction Studies on "Theorizing Asian American Fiction" (Spring 2010).

Jennifer Ann Ho is an associate professor in the English and Comparative Literature Department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Her current book manuscript, "What ARE You?" Racial Ambiguity in Contemporary Asian American Culture, investigates the theme of racial ambiguity and Asian American culture.

Madeline Y. Hsu is Director of the Center for Asian American Studies and Associate Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin. She wrote Dreaming [End Page 239] of Gold, Dreaming of Home (2000) which received the 2002 AAAS History Book Award. She is editor of Chinese American Transnational Politics (2010) and (coeditor with Sucheng Chan) of Chinese Americans and the Politics of Culture (2008).

Justin K.H. Tse is a PhD Candidate in Geography at the University of British Columbia. His thesis focuses on Cantonese-speaking evangelical Protestants in Metro Vancouver, the San Francisco Bay Area, and Hong Kong SAR. His work appears in Population, Space, and Place and in the collection Religion and Place: Identity, Community, Territory. [End Page 240]

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