"The Middle Kingdom under the Big Sky is based on the important and well-accepted premise that historians and audiences need to know more about the lives of Chinese people in nineteenth-century America and in the diaspora from the perspectives of the Chinese (in America and abroad) themselves. Working with this compelling idea, Mark T. Johnson offers a fascinating history of the Chinese diasporic experience in Montana from 1870 to the 1950s, using previously ignored and untranslated collections at the Montana Historical Society."—Laura Madokoro, Western Historical Quarterly
"This is an excellent, very readable book that is meaningful to students and the general public on Asian American history, rural America, racial prejudice, transnationalism, and relations between China and the United States."—Sue Fawn Chung, Journal of Arizona History
"This is a model study."—Charles E. Rankin, Roundup Magazine
"This book is a unique and important contribution not only to Montana’s history but how primary voices can be used to explore the granular texture of events well-trodden in history books."—Christopher Merritt, Annals of Wyoming
"The Middle Kingdom under the Western Sky offers a valuable, close-up view of Chinese workers' almost century-long struggle, from the 1860s to the 1950s, to find a stable footing between their desperate homeland families' need for money and the unceasingly hostile, unwelcoming world of Montana where they labored to earn it."—Sara Tucker, Kansas History
"By spending significant time reconstructing the details of a Chinese community, this book resists and revises the outdated and stereotypical views of early Chinese immigrants that denied individuality and identity."—Zhihui Zou, World History Encyclopedia
“Johnson’s transnational approach to his subject sets his work apart from most other studies done on the Chinese experience in Montana. The author makes excellent use of primary sources, including materials that help to capture the Chinese voices in the story and have rarely, if ever, been utilized by other historians.”—Robert R. Swartout Jr., professor emeritus of history at Carroll College and coeditor of Montana Legacy: Essays on History, People, and Place
“The Middle Kingdom under the Big Sky fills a gap in the history of Montana as well as of Chinese immigration. . . . Joining a group of new scholars, Johnson takes a transnational approach in dealing with the topic and provides a good example of this new kind of scholarship.”—Liping Zhu, author of The Road to Chinese Exclusion: The Denver Riot, 1880 Election, and Rise of the West
“Mark Johnson draws insights from a cache of untranslated documents . . . to understand the challenges of Chinese experiences in Montana and the American West. Highlighting voices of Montana’s Chinese residents via their own words, Johnson artfully connects personal accounts with regional and global history. The result is an important book about risk, agency, resilience, resistance, cooperation, and hope.”—Kelly J. Dixon, professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Montana
“With great care and insight, Johnson works to recover the rich history of Chinese in Montana, all the while grappling with limits of the historical record. Particularly noteworthy is his extensive use of Chinese-language sources, which add vivid details to the local community. Montana may seem an unlikely location for this transnational history, but Johnson reveals the deep roots of the Chinese diaspora in Big Sky country.”—Beth Lew-Williams, author of The Chinese Must Go: Violence, Exclusion, and the Making of the Alien in America