Here's a list of the books and journals I cited in my
essay for
Doctor Who and Race (excluding the Fu Manchu books themselves).
Sue Adamson et al.
Hidden from Public View? Racism against the Chinese Population. London: The Monitoring Group, April 2009.
Benton, Gregor and Edmund Terence Gomez (eds.), The Chinese in Britain, 1800-present: Economy, Transnationalism, Identity, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.
Stuart Brown et al,
Eclipse: Developing strategies to combat racism in theatre, London: Arts Council England, 2002.
Kathryn Castle. Britannia's Children: reading colonialism through children's books and magazines. Manchester; New York: Manchester University Press; New York: St. Matin's Press, 1996.
Clarke, Alan.
"Interview with David Yip, the Chinese Detective". Marxism Today, October 1983, 19-23.
Thomas J. Cogan, "Western Images of Asia: Fu Manchu and the Yellow Peril", Waseda Studies in Social Science, 3,2 (2002), 37-64.
Hamamoto, Darrell Y, Monitored peril: Asian Americans and the politics of TV representation, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1994.
Bill Hornadge, The Yellow Peril: a squint at some Australian attitudes towards Orientals, Dubbo, NSW: Review Publications, 1971
Kingsbury, Karen, "Yellow Peril, Dark Hero: Fu Manchu and the 'Gothic Bedevilment' of Racist Intent", in Ruth Bienstock Anolik and Douglas L. Howard, eds., The Gothic Other : Racial and Social Constructions in the Literary Imagination, Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Co, 2004, 104-119.
Lovell, Julia, The Opium War, Sydney: Picador, 2011.
Ng, Maria Noëlle. Representing Chinatown: Dr. Fu-Manchu at the Disappearing Moon Cafe. Canadian Literature 163 1999, pp 157-175.
Parker, David, "Rethinking British Chinese Identities", in Tracey Skelton and Gill Valentine (eds.), Cool Places: Geographies of Youth Cultures, London; New York: Routledge, 1998.
Steinmeyer, Jim, The Glorious Deception: the Double Life of William Robinson, aka Chung Ling Soo, the "Marvellous Chinese Conjuror", New York: Carrol and Graf, 2005.
Cay Van Ash and Elizabeth Sax Rohmer, Master of Villainy: A Biography of Sax Rohmer, Bowling Green: Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1972.
James L. Watson, "The Chinese: Hong Kong Villagers in the British Catering Trade", in James L. Watson, ed., Between Two Cultures: Migrants and Minorities in Britain, Blackwell: Oxford, 1977, 181-213.
And a DVD documentary:
Hollywood Chinese. Dir. Arthur Dong. Deep Focus Productions, 2007.
btw, for an introduction to some of the issues, you could do a lot worse than the short documentaries included with the 2010 Talons special edition DVD.