- Mai Ngai
Infobox academic
name = Mai Ngai
image_width = 150px
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birth_date =
birth_place =
death_date =
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residence =New York
citizenship =United States
ethnicity =Chinese American
field =American history
work_institutions =Columbia University
alma_mater =Columbia University
doctoral_advisor =Eric Foner
doctoral_students =
known_for =
influences =
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prizes = Frederick Jackson Turner Award
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footnotes =Mae M. Ngai is a professor of
history atColumbia University , who focuses onnationalism ,citizenship ,ethnicity , and race in 20th-centuryUnited States history.Life, education and career
Ngai writes that "as the daughter of Chinese immigrants, [she] grew up in a home where being in Chinese and being American existed in tension, but not in contradiction", and spent "not a few years in New York's Chinatown community and labor movement as an activist and professional labor educator" before becoming an academic.cite book
title=Impossible Subjects
first=Mai
last=Ngai
year=2004
publisher=Princeton University Press]Ngai obtained her bachelor's degree from
Empire State College , and obtained her PhD from Columbia University in 1998.cite web
url=http://www.radcliffe.edu/fellowships/current/bio.php?id=72&year=2003-2004
title=Current Fellows: Mai M. Ngai
publisher=Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study]After graduation, Ngai obtained postdoctoral fellowships from the
Social Science Research Council , theNew York University School of Law , and, in 2003, theRadcliffe Institute . She taught at theUniversity of Chicago as an associate professor, before returning to Columbia as a full professor in 2006.cite web
url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/Ngai/faculty.html
title=Mai Ngai
publisher=Columbia University Department of History]Published work
Ngai's first book, "Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America", was published by
Princeton University Press in 2004. The book won several prizes, including theAmerican Historical Association 's 2004 Littleton-Griswold Prize, theImmigration and Ethnic History Society 's 2004 Theodore Saloutos Book Award, and theOrganization of American Historians ' 2005 Frederick Jackson Turner Award. The book discusses the creation of the legal category of an "illegal alien " in the early 20th century, and its social and historical consequences and context.Besides publishing in various academic journals, Ngai has written on immigration and related policy for the "
Washington Post ", the "New York Times ", the "Los Angeles Times ", "The Nation ", and the "Boston Review ".References
External links
*cite news
title=The Lost Immigration Debate
url=http://bostonreview.net/BR31.5/ngai.php
first=Mai
last=Ngai
publisher=Boston Review
date=September/October 2006
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