Mae Ngai


Mae Ngai is an American historian who is the Lung Family Professor of Asian American Studies and Professor of History at Columbia University. Her work focuses on nationalism, citizenship, ethnicity, immigration, and race in 20th-century United States history.

Early life and education

Ngai was born in The Bronx, New York City, to a Taiwanese American family. Her family were Taiwanese waishengren that had fled mainland China for Taiwan during the Retreat of the government of the [Republic of China to Taiwan] in 1949, and her maternal grandfather was a Kuomintang official.
Ngai took a break from her schooling in 1972 to work as a community activist. After working in the Education and Political Action Department and the Consortium for Worker Education as a researcher and professional labor educator in an environment "where being Chinese and being American existed in tension, but not in contradiction," Ngai decided to pursue graduate school focusing on immigration studies.
Ngai earned a Bachelor of Arts from Empire State College in 1992, then a Master of Arts and Ph.D. from Columbia University, where she wrote her dissertation under Eric Foner.

Academic career

After graduation, Ngai obtained postdoctoral fellowships from the Social Science Research Council, the New York University School of Law, and, in 2003, the Radcliffe Institute. She taught at the University of Chicago as an associate professor before returning to Columbia as a full professor in 2006.
Ngai is especially interested in problems of nationalism, citizenship, and race as they are produced historically in law and society, in processes of transnational migration, and in the formation of ethno-racial communities.
In addition to publishing in numerous academic journals, Ngai has written on immigration and related policy for the Washington Post, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, and the Boston Review.
Ngai's most notable work was Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America, which discusses the creation of the legal category of an "illegal alien" in the early 20th century and its social and historical consequences and context.

Courses taught

Source:
  • Immigrants in American History and Life, Lecture
  • Colonization/Decolonization, Undergraduate Seminar
  • Transnational Migration and Citizenship, Graduate & Undergraduate Seminar
  • Historiography for PhD students

Awards and honors

Source:

Publications

Articles

  • Ron DeSantis 'Banned China From Buying Land in the State of Florida.' How Did We Get Here?" The New York Times, December 11, 2023
  • , The Journal of American History, June 1999, Vol. 86 No. 1
  • , Law and History Review, Spring 2003, Vol. 21 No. 1
  • Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America
  • "Birthright citizenship and the alien citizen." Fordham Law Review : 2521+ .
  • " 'A Slight Knowledge of the Barbarian Language': Chinese Interpreters in Late-Nineteenth and Early-Twentieth-Century America." Journal of American Ethnic History 30.2 : 5–32.
  • The Lucky Ones: One Family and the Extraordinary Invention of Chinese America Princeton University Press, 2012).
  • "Chinese gold miners and the “Chinese question” in nineteenth-century California and Victoria." Journal of American History 101.4 : 1082-1105.
  • The Chinese Question: The Gold Rushes and Global Politics