Jade last name origin
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Fifth Chinese Daughter
Wong begins with her early childhood in San Francisco’s Chinatown; she is the fifth daughter in a family that will eventually grow to nine children. Only Chinese is spoken
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Historical Essay
by Allecia Vermillion
San Francisco Museum and Historical Society Summer 2009
Jade Snow Wong
Jade Snow Wong was born on a rare snowy January day in San Francisco in 1922, and given the English name of Constance. A lifelong San Franciscan, she was the fifth of nine immigrant children. Growing up she was taught to expect a particular type of life, laid out for her by tradition and her elders. Through education, determination and hard work, Wong went beyond these traditions to pursue her passion and talent for the arts.
Wong attended San Francisco City College and later Mills College, where she majored in economics and sociology. She worked as a secretary in a shipyard office during World War II, but was introduced to pottery through an art class during her last semester of college. Ceramics would become a lifelong passion. Wong worked at studios in Chinatown, Jackson Square and, most prominently, on Russian Hill. When she first began pursuing ceramics, she persuaded a Grant Avenue merchant to let her throw pots on her wheel in the shop’s front windo
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Fifth Chinese Daughter
1950 memoir by Jade Snow Wong
1950 cover | |
| Author | Jade Snow Wong |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Subject | Memoir |
Publication date | 1950 |
| Publication place | United States |
| Media type | Print (hardcover) |
| Pages | 264 |
| ISBN | 9780295968261 (hardcover) |
Fifth Chinese Daughter is a 1950 memoir by Chinese American writer and ceramist Jade Snow Wong. The name of the book refers to Wong being the fifth child born to immigrant parents from China. The book has been considered as an early classic of Asian American literature.[1]
Synopsis
In Fifth Chinese Daughter, Wong describes her upbringing in Chinatown, San Francisco, providing a detailed portrayal of her family's immigrant experience and the disciplined upbringing she received. It also explores her defiance against the expectations imposed by both her family and society for a Chinese woman.
Reception
Published in 1950, the book became a best-seller, especially in the aftermath of the lifting of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943.[2]
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