The Chinese Youth League (CYL), a progressive patriotic organisation, is one of the few surviving political organisations of the early Chinese diaspora in Australia. [1] It was established in Sydney on 1 July 1939...As relations between China and Australia 'normalised' after 1973, the CYL's previous political commitments were superseded by the cultural, sporting and welfare concerns of Chinese Australians. The radical past of the Chinese Youth League faded into the background and politics were less and less in command. A bridge of solidarity had been built by the CYL from 1939 until 1973. Thereafter, as the Cold War receded and as China underwent political and economic transformation, the political significance of the Chinese Youth League d...
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture a...
Dr Sun Yat-Sen's revolutionary movement in China found support in Australia. In Melbourne in 1910 th...
This chapter draws attention to the efforts of Chinese residents and subjects in Australia seeking e...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of “youth” (qingnian) as a dis...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of “youth” (qingnian) as a dis...
In the early twentieth century, Chinese cabinetmakers' militancy in Melbourne not only secured a fai...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of \u201cyouth\u201d (qingnian)...
This article examines narratives of 'Huaqiao' in Australia to trace how identity was preserved throu...
In this paper I will discuss my research on Chinese community politics and Australia's early 20th-ce...
The Chinese press was the largest foreign-language press in Sydney over the late nineteenth century,...
This study is primarily concerned with the Chinese communities in New South Wales and Victoria gen...
The story of an association which began, at the turn of the 20th century, as a local club and became...
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture a...
The Chinese press was the largest foreign-language press in Sydney over the late nineteenth century,...
This work is first and foremost intended to be a reasonably comprehensive social history of the Chin...
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture a...
Dr Sun Yat-Sen's revolutionary movement in China found support in Australia. In Melbourne in 1910 th...
This chapter draws attention to the efforts of Chinese residents and subjects in Australia seeking e...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of “youth” (qingnian) as a dis...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of “youth” (qingnian) as a dis...
In the early twentieth century, Chinese cabinetmakers' militancy in Melbourne not only secured a fai...
The beginning of the twentieth century marked in China the emergence of \u201cyouth\u201d (qingnian)...
This article examines narratives of 'Huaqiao' in Australia to trace how identity was preserved throu...
In this paper I will discuss my research on Chinese community politics and Australia's early 20th-ce...
The Chinese press was the largest foreign-language press in Sydney over the late nineteenth century,...
This study is primarily concerned with the Chinese communities in New South Wales and Victoria gen...
The story of an association which began, at the turn of the 20th century, as a local club and became...
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture a...
The Chinese press was the largest foreign-language press in Sydney over the late nineteenth century,...
This work is first and foremost intended to be a reasonably comprehensive social history of the Chin...
In the early 1920s, the perceptions by Australians of the Chinese race was one of a single culture a...
Dr Sun Yat-Sen's revolutionary movement in China found support in Australia. In Melbourne in 1910 th...
This chapter draws attention to the efforts of Chinese residents and subjects in Australia seeking e...