Fotografía de autor

Scott D. Seligman

Autor de Chinese At a Glance

13 Obras 293 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Scott D. Seligman is a historian and retired corporate executive. He received degrees from Princeton University and Harvard University. He worked as a legislative assistant in Congress, a businessman in China, and a communications director of a Fortune 50 company. He is the author of several mostrar más scholarly and business books including Chinese Business Etiquette, The First Chinese American, and Tong Wars: The Untold Story of Vice, Money, and Murder in New York's Chinatown. (Bowker Author Biography) mostrar menos

Incluye el nombre: By (author) Scott Seligmen

Obras de Scott D. Seligman

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Conocimiento común

Género
male

Miembros

Reseñas

Jewish-law, cultural-exploration, cultural-heritage, immigrants, photographs, historical-places-events, historical-research, historical-setting, history-and-culture, NYC, New-York-law, Anti-Trust Act, Theodore Roosevelt*****

This is a meticulously researched study of practices which resulted in a large group of mostly unschooled female immigrants with limited English skills successfully challenging powerful vested corporate interests and gained the help of legal means as well as boycotts and the trustbuster Theodore Roosevelt and eventually some very noisy . Learn the realities of tenement life in 1902 in photos and rhetoric, as well as specific realities of European Jewish immigrants. Excellent!
I requested and received a free ebook copy from University of Nebraska Press/Potomac Books via NetGalley. Thank you!
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Denunciada
jetangen4571 | Dec 4, 2020 |
When I think of gang wars in New York, what immediately comes to mind is The Godfather and Mafia soldiers going to the mattresses; if I think about it a little longer I might remember Herbert Asbury and the battles between the Short Tails and the Dead Rabbits chronicled in The Gangs of New York. I had no idea there were equally violent conflicts in the early 20th century between the Hip Sing tong and the On Leong tong over gambling, opium and prostitution in New York City’s Chinatown. Author Scott Seligman is described as “fluent in Mandarin and conversant in Cantonese” in his dust cover biography, which must have been a huge help in putting together the Tong Wars story; Seligman notes that the was no standard spelling for Chinese words; newspaper reports and court records just made their best guess. Further, some Chinese adopted the western mode of putting their family name second, others went by nicknames, and some even used their place of business as a personal name.

Seligman notes “tong” means “chamber”, and most tongs started out as benevolent societies much like the Masons or the Oddfellows or the Elks. That changed – at least, the nonChinese perception changed; most Chinese seemed to feel that if a man wanted to relax by gambling a little, having a whore, and smoking a pipe of opium after a hard day at the laundry that was nobody’s business but his own. The tongs saw themselves as facilitating this arrangement, which they did by bribing New York City police to look the other way. Bribes took money, and the tongs got it by levying “protection” on Chinese businesses. Alas, there were some people who did think gambling, prostitution and drugs were vices that should be suppressed; the Parkhurst Society, named after a prominent New York City clergyman, set off to suppress them, convincing police to stage raids and district attorneys to prosecute. The tongs reacted by going after each other in an attempt to keep their shares of a diminishing pot.

The carnage was awesome. Tong members stabbed, hatcheted, shot, poisoned and dynamited each other; from Selgiman’s account it was usually relatively low ranking members that got hit. In that sense it wasn’t like Mafia struggles for control of an organization where leaders were targets; instead the violence centered on the concept of “face”; if the Hip Sings killed an On Leong, the On Leongs had to retaliate with an equivalent murder or be shamed. There were numerous attempts at stopping the violence, both by the authorities and by the Chinese themselves; nothing really worked. Widely publicized peace treaties were painfully negotiated and didn’t even last for a day; there were arrests, imprisonments, deportations and electrocutions but they didn’t slow things down either. It was The Great Depression and the consequent drying up of the cash pool plus a patriotic response to the Japanese invasion of China that finally got the tongs to sign a lasting treaty, in 1933. There was still a murder now and then, but they were now most likely for good American reasons of personal animosity rather than tong rivalry, and the tong leaders were always quick to smooth things over.

Fascinating; Seligman is an engaging writer and manages to keep the characters and chronology straight. This is helped by a list of dramatis personae at the beginning of the book and a glossary and gazetteer at the end, plus a map of Chinatown with locations identified. Photographs of the participants and Chinatown scenes, end notes (by page number), references and a good index. Instructive history.
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½
3 vota
Denunciada
setnahkt | Apr 12, 2020 |
A guide to protocol, manners, and culture in the People's Republic of China
 
Denunciada
jhawn | otra reseña | Jul 31, 2017 |
A fascinating and informative brass tacks guide for Westerners doing business in the PRC by an American businessman who has resided and worked there for the past 28 years. Reviewed and lauded by various international business nabobs. While not geared to the casual traveler, it is an insider's view of the how's and why's of Chinese culture that would be helpful to anyone who is interested in visiting China or understanding the culture of Chinese immigrants in one's own country. As a book that promotes understanding and harmony between cultures, this one gets kudos from me!… (más)
 
Denunciada
PitcherBooks | otra reseña | Sep 10, 2011 |

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Obras
13
Miembros
293
Popularidad
#79,900
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
39
Idiomas
2

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