39.
40.
See The Eastern Miscellancy Vol. VI, No. 2, pp. 29-34.
(中國殖民史)
See Lee Chang Fu The History of Chinese Immigration († 1 §£&£)
Commercial Press 1937, p. 293.
41. Ibid. p. 268.
42.
43.
44.
See C.Y. Chang "Legal Establishment in Protection of Overseas
Chinese Before and After 1911 Revolution", a paper presented in a
conference on Nangang Overseas Chinese and 1911 Revolution,
sponsored by South Seas Society of Singapore and History Society of
Taiwan, held in March 1986 in Taipei.
For details, see American Diplomatic & Public Papers: The United
States and China 1861-1893. Scholarly Resources Inc. 1979, Vol.
12.
For details, see Lee Chang Fu, Op. cit. pp. 305-309. Also Shun
沈已堯
Chi Yao ( (R), One Century of Anti-Chinese Abroad
(海外排華百千史)
Hong Kong: Wan You Books 1970.
45.
See Chu Sze Ka,
朱士嘉
) ed. The History of Persecution of
46.
47.
48.
49.
Chinese Labour in the United States (美國迫害華工史) Peking:
Chung Hwa Books Company, 1958.
Ibid.
For a good example of Kuomintang's campaign on human rights issue,
see Tsai Kui Jiang(3) "Chung Hsin Jit Pau: The Voice of
Singapore Tung Meng Hui 1907-1910" An unpublished paper presented
in the Conference on Southeast Asian Chinese and the Revolution of
1911 held in Taipei, Feb, 1968.
For example, Mary Robers Coolidge was one of those scholars who
argued for Ching on this issue. See Coolidge M.R. Chinese
Immigration. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1909.
Kuomintang painted of 1911 Revolution was very much a revolution
for Overseas Chinese by Overseas Chinese who were the one worst
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