WILLIAM WONG
William
Wong was born and grew up in Oakland, Californias Chinatown, the
youngest child and only son of seven children of Gee Seow Hong and Gee
Suey Ting. His parents ran The Great China restaurant in the heart of
Chinatown from 1943 to 1961. He attended Oakland public schools and
the University of California at Berkeley before becoming a journalist
for mainstream newspapers.
He is the author of Images of America: Oaklands
Chinatown, a photo history, which was published by Arcadia Publishing
Co. in the autumn of 2004. Wong won a California Council for the Humanities
California Stories grant to conduct oral interviews of Oakland
Chinese Americans who grew up in the pre-World War II era. The oral
history project is an extension of the photo history book. This web
site, www.oaklandchinatownhistory.org,
is devoted to those personal stories.
His first book, Yellow Journalist: Dispatches from Asian America
(Temple University Press, 2001), is a collection of columns, essays,
commentaries and stories that chronicle the Asian American experience.
In Yellow Journalist, Wong writes about growing up in Oaklands
Chinatown, Asian American history, social and racial justice, anti-Asian
racism, race relations, immigration, media portrayals, and politics,
among other topics. The book is the result of more than 30 years of
Wong's work as a journalist and inside observer of Asian America's dynamic
role in a changing America. www.yellowjournalist.com.
As a freelance writer, Wong writes for progressive nonprofit organizations
and foundations, such as the Annie E. Casey Foundation. His journalism
career included writing for The Wall Street Journal, the Oakland
Tribune, the San Francisco Chronicle, the San Francisco
Examiner, Asian Week, salon.com, and other news outlets.
A pioneer among Asian American journalists, Wong has been a columnist,
reporter, editorial writer, section editor, senior editor, and ombudsman.
Among his most significant achievements were in-depth news feature stories
about a growing Asian American community for The Wall Street Journal's
front page in the 1970s and his provocative columns about Asian America,
race relations, multiculturalism and a changing America.
Wong has been a regional commentator on The News Hour with Jim
Lehrer on the Public Broadcasting System and a guest commentator
on other national and local radio and television public affairs shows.
He has won awards from, among others, the Organization of Chinese Americans,
the New California Media, National Conference of Christians and Jews,
Media Alliance of San Francisco, the Asian American Journalists Association,
the World Affairs Council of Northern California and the San Francisco
Press Club.
Wong has a B.A. degree from the University of California at Berkeley
and a M.S. degree from Columbia Universitys Graduate School of
Journalism. He was a Peace Corps volunteer in the Philippines in the
mid-1960s, a Jefferson Fellow (East-West Center, Honolulu, Hawaii) in
1983 and a National Press Foundation Fellow for its Multiracial Society
conference in June 1998.
He has traveled extensively through Asia, Europe and South Africa.
Wong has taught journalism at the University of California at Berkeley's
Graduate School of Journalism, San Francisco State University, and Dominican
College, San Rafael. He has also taught Asian American Studies at San
Francisco State. He is a frequent speaker to community, civic and education
groups.