
Contents
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Creating Community before Katrina: Economic and Religious Spaces Creating Community before Katrina: Economic and Religious Spaces
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A Natural and Human-Made Disaster: Political Empowerment and Social Activism A Natural and Human-Made Disaster: Political Empowerment and Social Activism
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From Margin to Center: Sustaining and Promoting Vietnamese Culture From Margin to Center: Sustaining and Promoting Vietnamese Culture
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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9 Creating a Multiethnic Gulf South: Vietnamese American Cultural and Economic Visibility before and after Katrina
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Published:July 2015
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Abstract
Since first arriving in the Gulf South in the 1970s, Vietnamese Americans have played an important role in shaping the region’s economic and cultural landscapes. This essay examines how Vietnamese in New Orleans, Louisiana, and Biloxi, Mississippi, have attempted to establish a more visible presence following Hurricane Katrina. Faced with physical devastation and political challenges that emerged during the rebuilding process, Vietnamese Americans living along the Gulf Coast worked to preserve their cultural heritage and establish new communal and economic relationships with those outside of their ethnic community. These efforts continue to reshape the Gulf South as an increasingly multi-ethnic region.
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