I Am Not a Tourist
By (Author) Daisy J. Hung
HarperCollins Publishers
HQ
2nd July 2025
13th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Migration, immigration and emigration
Social groups, communities and identities
True stories of survival of abuse and injustice
Interviews / discussions
Memoirs
Hardback
352
Width 159mm, Height 240mm, Spine 36mm
540g
I may not yet feel fully British, but my family and I have made Britain our home. This book is for my daughters, so they can see themselves reflected in this country.'
It was during a trip to a museum in 2014 that Daisy Hung first recalls being incorrectly labelled as a tourist a trend that has continued since she settled in the UK, regardless of the documents she has gathered. From assumptions that she speaks Mandarin or that shes from China, to hearing the continued use of offensive and culturally insensitive terms, such as Oriental and Chinese whispers, she has consistently felt othered, despite being a British citizen and having only once visited Hong Kong and China.
In I Am Not a Tourist, Daisy explores what it means to be British Chinese today, and the social, historical and political factors that have got us here. Fighting narrow and dehumanising stereotypes, of Chinese people excelling at school, or being devoid of original thought or leadership, or having authoritarian parents, she encourages readers to interrogate their assumptions and interpretations of Chinese identity.
In the wake of the upsurge of anti-Asian racism, triggered by the racialisation of the COVID-19 pandemic as the China virus, China plague and Kung flu, I Am Not a Tourist exposes the ongoing racism and inequalities that British Chinese communities face, and forms an urgent call for change.
Daisy J. Hung is a diversity practitioner, writer, and artist, advocating for social justice across personal and professional spheres. She is the Head of Equality, Diversity and Inclusion in the Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences Division at the University of Oxford.
Daisy has a unique, international perspective on race, identity, and belonging, informed by a 20-year career across legal, non-profit and education sectors working to support marginalised communities. As a person of Chinese descent, born in Canada with family from Hong Kong, raised in the US, and now settled in the UK, her sense of identity has shifted among many different contexts.
Daisy was longlisted for the Penguin Random House WriteNow 2020 competition, and was selected for the inaugural HarperCollins Author Academy programme in 2021 and The Greene Door Projects mentoring scheme in November 2021.