Book

Chinatowns: towns within cities in Canada

University of British Columbia PressVancouver, B.C. • Published In 1988 • Pages:

By: Lai, Chuen-yan David.

Abstract
This work is a history of Chinatowns in Canada. Lai '…traces the transformation of the physical and cultural landscapes of Canadian Chinatowns from 1858 to 1988, and analyzes their origins, locations, viability, and socio-economic and image changes' (p. xv). There are data in this book on the Chinese immigration to Canada and the changing demographic characteristics of the Chinese people during the period studied. Classifying Chinatowns into four groups - old, new, replaced, and reconstructed historic - Lai focuses on Victoria's Chinatown as a representative example of the historic type. He then employs a 'stage-development' model, consisting of four phases - budding, blooming, withering, and dying (or reviving) - to study the progression of Chinatown development, not only in Victoria, but also throughout North America. Lai also describes '…a public involvement model of community planning which is responsible for the successful rehabilitation project in Victoria - one which has received international recognition' (p. iii).
Subjects
Demography
History and culture change
Settlements
Labor supply and employment
Ethnic stratification
culture
Chinese Canadians
HRAF PubDate
1995
Region
North America
Sub Region
Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Geographer
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle, 1994
Field Date
no date
Coverage Date
ca. 1858-1985
Coverage Place
Canada, various locations, especially Victoria, B.C.
Notes
David Chuenyan Lai
Includes bibliographical references (p. [317]-335) and index
LCCN
c88915552
LCSH
Chinese Canadians