logo
Beyond Chinatown

Beyond Chinatown

Diana Giese

National Library of Australia,                     1995

I found the book most interesting and enjoyable… In it there is a picture of evacuees’ children living in Eden Hill in South Australia, in an old empty hospital. People’s attitude towards the Chinese during Wartime evacuation in 1942 was so friendly and helpful.
Lily Ah Toy

Beyond Chinatown contains key records of the formation and make-up of Darwin
China Books

 

Read about the successful publication and reprint of Beyond Chinatown: The Top End Chinese Experience  
in National Library of Australia News

Beyond Chinatown: read extracts

Beyond Chinatown
Natalie Chin, Grace Fintlen and Lily Ah Toy at the Darwin launch of Beyond Chinatown .
(Courtesy Francis Good)

'Who do we think we are?...The false representation of history is not something that can be forced on a free people without an organised, Stalinist-style campaign. But a national history that denies all its people voices can be totalitarian by default… Jimmy Ah Toy spoke out against officials and others who insisted on classifying the Chinese as sojourners. His family remembers the hardship the campaign against Chinatown created for the Chinese. They did not wish to be repatriated to some non-existent "home". "These old men did not want to go home because they had no homes to go to," he said. After having laboured to build and sustain the settlements of Australia, "after having been here 50 or 60 years, they claimed this as their home".' 1

1  Jimmy Ah Toy, transcript of undated talk to the Historical Society of the Northern Territory

Beyond Chinatown
  Wartime evacuees from Darwin at Eden Hills, South Australia. The Ah Toy, Que Noy, Cheong and Hee families are represented.
(From Beyond Chinatown , page 13 and the Pictorial Collection, National Library)

Links

To read the whole book, go to an interactive version at the National Library of Australia at https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-3715309/view?partId=nla.obj-3719906 or https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-3715309

The book is archived by Pandora at https://webarchive.nla.gov.au/tep/128224  Select webpage snapshot 22 July 2011

See also Papers of Diana Giese at https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-341276786 or access a list of the 73 libraries which hold copies

On Google Books at https://books.google.com.au/books/about/Beyond_Chinatown.html?id=UklzAAAAMAAJ&redir_esc=y

Also '"Where others failed, the Chinese succeeded": collecting and re-evaluating the history of the Chinese...' in Macgregor (ed.), Proceedings, conference on Histories of the Chinese in Australia and the South Pacific, 1995 at http://trove.nla.gov.au/version/51869095

  READ MORE

© Copyright Diana Giese. All rights reserved
Powered by SiteSuite Website Design