My New Book!

My New Book!
My New Book!

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

July 16, 2025: AmericanStudying Sinners: The Mississippi Chinese

[A couple months back, my wife and I were blown away by one of the best films either of us has seen in a long while: Ryan Coogler’s stunning Sinners. I hope you’ve all had a chance to check it out already, and if not, that you’ll do so right now and then come back to read this weeklong series of posts inspired by different layers to this phenomenal work!]

[NOTE: I tried to mostly avoid SPOILERS in Monday’s post, but I don’t think I’ll completely be able to for the rest of the week. If you haven’t seen Sinners yet, please do so and then come back to read this series!]

On a 1970s book and 2010s article that help contextualize one of the film’s most unique families.

In 1971, the late, great historian and educator James Loewen (whom I was profoundly proud to call a mentor and friend after I landed him for the 2011 NEASA Conference keynote lecture) published his first book, The Mississippi Chinese: Between Black and White. A revision of his Harvard Sociology doctoral dissertation, if one no doubt significantly expanded after Loewen began teaching at Mississippi’s historically black Tougaloo College, The Mississippi Chinese utilizes both extensive interviews with current members of this sizeable but often overlooked Mississippi community and historical documentation of that community’s post-Civil War origins and growth over the subsequent century. Although the exclusion of the community’s children from segregated white schools was deemed Constitutional by the Supreme Court in Gong Lum v. Rice (1927), Loewen makes a compelling case that this community were and are, his title suggests, complicatedly located between the state and region’s two most prominent racialized categories.

Loewen’s book focuses on the Mississippi Chinese’s historical and sociological realities, while the award-winning 2012 Philological Quarterly article “The Foreigner in Yoknapatawpha: Rethinking Race in the Global South,” authored by my college friend and blog Guest Poster Heidi Kim, is most interested in representations of this community, especially in the fictions of Mississippi’s favorite literary son William Faulkner. As Heidi describes her argument in that above hyperlinked summary, she both notes “Faulkner’s extension of racial hysteria over miscegenation to include” the Mississippi Chinese but also, and importantly, finds in his works “the possibility of eventual social intermixture and inclusion in his American South.” Which makes her argument at least roughly parallel to Loewen’s (if of course informed by four decades’ worth of further research into this community and its contexts) in seeing this community as part of its larger Mississippi setting and society, yet also reflecting, in cultural works as well as in historical and sociological realities, the possibility of something distinct within that world.  

It's a very nerdy thing to say, I realize, but nothing made me more excited while watching Sinners (a competitive category I assure you) than realizing that Coogler had included the Mississippi Chinese among his central characters, with the family of Grace Chow (Li Jun Li), her husband Bo (Yao), and their teenage daughter Lisa (Helena Hu). As that hyperlinked Variety article highlights, Coogler has familial connections to this community through his multiracial wife Zinzi Evans, reminding us that, whatever the Supreme Court and other racist entities might argue, all of these American communities are deeply intertwined in our history and present alike. But in his representation of these Mississippi Chinese characters, and especially in a long establishing shot early in the film that takes audiences between the family’s two parallel grocery stores located on the Black and white sides of Clarksdale’s main street, Coogler also reveals his awareness of the community’s in-between status—and creates another cultural work that, like Faulkner’s, illustrates while also ultimately complicating that vision of the unique community known as the Mississippi Chinese.  

Next SinnersStudying tomorrow,

Ben

PS. What do you think?

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