New Book Explores Immigrants’ Suburban American Dreams and Struggles

May 28, 2019 / Updated Mar 28, 2020

Image
New Book Explores Immigrants’ Suburban American Dreams and Struggles

Lung-Amam's Tresspassers is "essential reading on the landscape of twenty-first-century America."

Join Willow Lung-Amam for a special book talk at the University of Maryland School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, October 5, 2017 at 2:30pm in the Library!

Over the last few decades, California’s Silicon Valley has become not only the world’s technological epicenter, but also one of the fastest growing, and most racially and ethnically diverse regions in the U.S. Spurred by the rise of tech giants like Google and Facebook, the region has attracted diverse, highly-educated immigrants from across the globe—particularly Asia—who have built their new lives among the Valley’s many predominately white, middle-class suburbs.

A new book written by the University of Maryland’s Dr. Willow Lung-Amam explores the dreams and struggles of Asian Americans as they have made their homes in Silicon Valley suburbia, and the tensions that often emerged from the city’s changing character. Trespassers?: Asian Americans and the Battle for Suburbia tells the tale of one Silicon Valley community’s decades-long transformation from a small, rural town into a diverse immigrant gateway. Through the voices of long-term residents, recent immigrants, and city officials, Trespassers? offers a unique window into the everyday lives, landscapes, and politics of this iconic and rapidly changing region. It also offers lessons for urban practitioners and scholars about the vital role of immigrants in the changing American landscape and their struggles for inclusion within the American Dream. 

Trespassers? is a question to readers about how they interpret the central conflicts of the book,” explains Dr. Lung-Amam. “The suburban landscape upon which immigrants are increasingly making their homes has long been shaped by ideas and policies of social exclusion, privilege, and privacy. Yet it has also served as a beacon of the American Dream. In era of rapidly increasing diversity in Silicon Valley and elsewhere, how flexible is suburbia to being reimagined by a new generation of dreamers?”

Read Lung-Amam's interview in CityLab here

Dr. Lung-Amam is Assistant Professor of Urban Studies and Planning and Director of Community Development at the National Center for Smart Growth Research and Education at the University of Maryland, College Park. She is a 2017 Nancy Weiss Malkiel Scholar and a recent Ford Foundation Postdoctoral FellowTrespassers? is available from University of California Press here. Read more about Dr. Lung-Amam or contact her for a book talk here.

 

Advanced Praise for Trespassers:

“This book is essential reading on the landscape of twenty-first-century America.”

—Dr. Andrew Wiese, author of Places of Their Own: African American Suburbanization in the Twentieth Century

“This is good reading for anyone interested in Silicon Valley, suburban knowledge-based economic centers, and in general how American suburbs are changing as a result of economic restructuring and immigration.” —Dr. Wei Li, author of Ethnoburb: The New Ethnic Community in Urban America

 “Vital reading for those interested in spaces of intersection of different Asian American groups residing in the rapidly changing suburban landscape in Silicon Valley in particular and those interested in suburban spatial justice in general.”— Dr. Katrin B. Anacker, editor of The New American Suburb: Poverty, Race, and the Economic Crisis

“Willow Lung-Amam’s analysis is particularly new and insightful and will likely spark a lot of discussion and debate.”—Dr. Wendy Cheng, author of The Changs Next Door to the Díazes: Remapping Race in Suburban California