ABSTRACT

The metamorphosis of Asians in American society from “yellow perils” to “model minorities” in the mid-twentieth century stands as one of the most arresting racial makeovers in U.S. history. To contemporaries, the rapid evolution from despised Orientals to the country’s most exceptional and beloved people of color was so breathtaking that it was literally front-page news: the New York Times (1970) declared ethnic Japanese and Chinese “an American success story,” having witnessed “the almost total disappearance of discrimination.” Remarkably, their “assimilation into the mainstream of American life” was a situation that would have been “unthinkable twenty years ago.”1 How did this happen? And what were the consequences of this transformationif more image than reality-not only for Asian Americans but also for the nation as a whole?