Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
Texas Tech University Scholars Home
Home
Scholars
Organizations
Grants
Research
Scholarly Activities
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Virtual community and the cultural imaginary of Chinese Americans
Yuan Shu
English
Research output
:
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
›
Chapter
›
peer-review
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Virtual community and the cultural imaginary of Chinese Americans'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Arts & Humanities
1960s
2%
Activists
2%
American Culture
9%
American Identity
3%
American Public Life
4%
Anthropologists
2%
Articulation
3%
Asia
4%
Asian Americans
8%
Authority
2%
Causes
1%
China
4%
Chinatown
8%
Chinese Language
7%
Chineseness
4%
Citizenship
3%
Communication
1%
Communist
5%
Cultural Imaginary
96%
Cultural Space
7%
Cultural Studies
2%
Declaration
3%
Demographics
2%
Early Twentieth-century
2%
East Asia
9%
Economy
1%
Enclaves
3%
English People
2%
English Speakers
3%
European Union
2%
Foregrounding
3%
Foreigners
3%
Government
1%
Headlines
3%
Hearing
2%
Hong Kong
2%
Identity Politics
5%
Immigrants
6%
India
2%
Indifference
3%
Industry
8%
Informing
3%
Invisible
2%
Japan
2%
Jurisdiction
3%
Language
2%
Law Enforcement
4%
Liability
2%
Mainland China
10%
Military
1%
Multinational Corporations
2%
Names
1%
Nation-state
7%
National Security
3%
Native Language
3%
Northeast
3%
Online Communities
7%
Policymaker
5%
Political Power
3%
Residents
2%
Social Interaction
3%
Someday
4%
South Korea
3%
South-East Asia
3%
Southern California
4%
Southern China
4%
Speculation
3%
Spies
3%
Taiwan
3%
Virtual Community
100%
Visibility
3%
Workers
1%
Working Class
4%
World Wide Web
56%