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Article
Contested Memories of Place: Representations of Salinas’ Chinatown
Oral History Review (2010)
  • Rina Benmayor, California State University, Monterey Bay
Abstract
This paper explores contested memories of place in the historical recovery and community revitalization of Salinas, California's old Chinatown. For over a century, Chinatown has been home to Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and Mexicans. Today, it is occupied by the homeless, drug dealers, and addicts. Chinatown is variously remembered as the site of the best Chinese food in town, a place of gambling and prostitution, and “home.” Oral histories reveal multiple and contested significations of place: from intensely nostalgic recollections that mythify the past to distanced accounts that reveal little attachment to place. Narratives shed light on the tensions involved in cultural recovery and negotiating spatial claims across ethnic and cultural groups, generations, and social classes. Accounts also reveal how the restoration of lost community history can generate new coalitional practice.
Keywords
  • Chinatown,
  • community memory,
  • contested memory,
  • meaning of place,
  • oral history
Publication Date
2010
DOI
10.1093/OHR/OHQ092
Citation Information
Rina Benmayor. "Contested Memories of Place: Representations of Salinas’ Chinatown" Oral History Review Vol. 37 Iss. 2 (2010) p. 225 - 234
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/rina-benmayor/14/