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LibrariesLife News (Pop Culture)
Newswise — STORY: The recent public fervor over immigration and the future of undocumented or illegal immigrants is a recurring theme in U.S. history and culture, says University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Associate Professor of English Linda Frost, Ph.D., author of the 2005 book “Never One Nation: Freaks, Savages and Whiteness in U.S. Popular Culture: 1850-1877.”
Frost argues that in the 19th century, depictions of minorities and immigrants in popular magazines illustrated who was and who was not considered American and played a major role in fusing “Americanness” with whiteness.
WHAT: “In fact, the actual status of ‘Americanness’ – who gets to claim it, and of course, who gets to reap the economic, political, and social benefits of that claim – is linked quite emphatically to notions of racial whiteness. Today, the non-American group mos
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“In 1869, for instance, popular writer Ned Buntline described a group of Chinese
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MORE: “The conversation about immigration and the rights of immigrants in the United States, despite our national mythologies of a racially blended society, ultimately says much more about how fragile and insecure the nation's members feel about themselves as authorized ‘Americans’ and the strength of that identity than they do any truth about the immigrant group in question. This is certainly not surprising in a time of tremendous fear about ‘homeland security’ and the ability to shore up our economic and physical safeties.
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