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Available From UC Press
Trespassers?
Beyond the gilded gates of Google, little has been written about the suburban communities of Silicon Valley. Over the past several decades, the region’s booming tech economy spurred rapid population growth, increased racial diversity, and prompted an influx of immigration, especially among highly skilled and educated migrants from China, Taiwan, and India. At the same time, the response to these newcomers among long-time neighbors and city officials revealed complex attitudes in even the most well-heeled and diverse communities.
Trespassers? takes an intimate look at the everyday life and politics inside Silicon Valley against a backdrop of these dramatic demographic shifts. At the broadest level, it raises questions about the rights of diverse populations to their own piece of the suburban American Dream. It follows one community over several decades as it transforms from a sleepy rural town to a global gateway and one of the nation's largest Asian American–majority cities. There, it highlights the passionate efforts of Asian Americans to make Silicon Valley their home by investing in local schools, neighborhoods, and shopping centers. It also provides a textured tale of the tensions that emerge over this suburb's changing environment. With vivid storytelling, Trespassers? uncovers suburbia as an increasingly important place for immigrants and minorities to register their claims for equality and inclusion.
"Willow Lung-Amam's analysis is particularly new and insightful and will likely spark a lot of discussion and debate."—Wendy Cheng, Assistant Professor of American Studies, Scripps College
"As the model American immigrants . . . Asian dot-com families have been silently formatting the twenty-first-century Silicon Valley suburbs for three decades. Lung-Amam's work precisely articulates mansions, high-performing schools, and Asian malls as the three-fold symbolic Asian American norm of the mainstream Americanization."—Shenglin Elijah Chang, author of The Global Silicon Valley Home
Willow Lung-Amam’s ethnographic case study of Asian Americans pursuing the American Dream on often inhospitable grounds in Fremont in Silicon Valley reveals racial and economic change. She competently and extensively discusses the splintered social order on the frontlines of debate over Asian Americans’ new claims to their rights as suburbanites. Trespassers? Asian Americans and the Battle for Suburbia is vital reading for those interested in spaces of intersection of different Asian American groups residing in the rapidly changing suburban landscape in Silicon Valley in particular and those interested in suburban spatial justice in general.—Katrin B. Anacker, editor of The New American Suburb: Poverty, Race, and the Economic Crisis
"With rich evidence and sharp prose, Willow Lung-Amam illuminates Asian Americans' contested efforts to make places, meanings, and identities in the global landscapes of California's Silicon Valley. This book is essential reading on the landscape of twenty-first-century America."—Andrew Wiese, Professor of History, San Diego State University, and author of Places of Their Own: African American Suburbanization in the Twentieth Century