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54 pages 1 hour read

Kelly Yang

New from Here

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2022

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Background

Cultural Context: The Relationship Between Hong Kong and China

In 1997, rule over Hong Kong was passed to China after many years of British rule. In 2003, tensions rose in Hong Kong as people feared the passage of Article 23. They believed Article 23 might inhibit important freedoms including the freedom of speech. Protests continued throughout the years, and in 2012, these began to be centered around education. The 2012 protests concerned a new requirement whereby schools in Hong Kong were forced to teach propaganda supporting the Chinese Communist Party. In 2014, protests centered around a new requirement that candidates for office in Hong Kong be preselected by the Chinese Communist Party (Butts, Dylan, et al. “Hong Kong’s Timeline Since the 1997 British Handover to China.” NBC News, 2022).

In 2019, China passed a new law for Hong Kong that came as a result of mounting protests over the years. According to this law, China would have the authority to put Hong Kong citizens in prison for life for crimes such as terrorism and collusion. Those accused could be tried in China rather than in Hong Kong. Many people have been arrested and imprisoned because of this law, and numerous organizations have spoken out against it.

While none of these political conflicts are specifically spoken about in the novel, there is tension in Hong Kong against the government and people of mainland China. The tension in the novel involves whether to allow people from mainland China into Hong Kong during the days when the virus is present in China, but not in Hong Kong. Because of the fraught relationship between Hong Kong and China, however, the current of anti-mainland sentiment about COVID-19 was most likely influenced by these larger political movements.

Cultural Context: Racism in America During the COVID-19 Pandemic

In the United States, controversy and turmoil was brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to the pandemic’s political and personal impact, an increase in awareness of systemic racism in the US was achieved. Racist, violent acts were committed by individuals, organizations, and police departments. The Wei-Evans family becomes loosely involved in the fight against racism as they hang up signs supporting Black Lives Matter and advocating against racism toward Asian people and people of Asian descent in America. The Black Lives Matter movement is interested in protecting Black people from undo violence, particularly by police officers. The movement was involved in the backlash against police departments after the killing of Breonna Taylor in her own home by police officers. This occurred in March 2020 and is mentioned and described in the novel.

Racism against Asian people in America grew during the COVID-19 pandemic due to racist views and blaming of Chinese individuals and those of Asian descent for causing the pandemic. The racist beliefs that circulated centered around the idea that any Asian person would be more likely to carry the virus than a white person. Racism against Asian people hit such a peak that 20% of Asian American people reported racist acts against themselves during the pandemic, according to a Frontiers in Public Health research study. This racism resulted in a dramatic drop in revenue for Chinese restaurants, like the one in the novel, compared to other restaurants during the pandemic (Huang, Justin T., et al. “The Cost of Anti-Asian Racism During the COVID-19 Pandemic.” Nature Human Behaviour, 2023).

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