Friday, June 15, 2007

Companion to American Immigration

One of the eye-opening experiences of reading Companion to American Immigration (Blackwell, 2006) is its foundational assumptions based solidly on Marxist thought and scholarship. Not that I was naive about the Marxists in our universities, but reading essay after essay--about food, education, demography, social customs, microeconomics, politics, and law--all rooted in and rooting for Marxism is quite an eye opener as I read along at the Lakeside coffee shop, a vacation spot more like the 1950s than a TV "Happy Days" recreation.

If you've ever wondered what became of the "tenured radicals" who went from sit-ins in the presidents' offices in the Halls of Ivy in the 1970s to populating them, read this book! They are indeed the adopted intellectual grandchildren of the 1930s faculties and labor activists who were pacifists until Germany invaded Russia and then had to go underground when the Gulags were being revealed after WWII. When the Berlin Wall fell, they used chunks of scholarly concrete to rebuild their fables.

I've learned a lot of new words and phrases for us and U.S. reading this book:

    marriageways
    nuptiality
    marital endogamy

    draconian reductions in immigration [during the Depression, duh!]
    recovery from the Depression "eroded ethnic differences"

    boutique farms
    foodways
    culinary nationalists
    women as cultural conservators

    aping the life of gentry
    Anglo-Saxonism
    Germano-Celtic
    nativist sentiment
    dominant society
    host society
    core culture

    institutionalized nationhood
    individualizing destiny
    assimilationists
    pluralist vision
    voluntary pluralism
    vocabularies of public life
    civic homogenization

    language shift
    language loss
    home language

    schools as labor pools for industry
    cauldron (instead of "melting pot")
    well-socialized labor force
    enforced schooling to empower the government
And academic gibberish even worse than library jargon:
    gendered dimensions of transnational ties (I have no idea what this is!)
    major shareholders of identity
    ethno-cultural, creedal, and individualistic pluralistic models
    contingent contagionists
    immigrant transnationals
Incidentally, if there was a lynching, a killing, a riot, or a law about ethnicity, these are liberally interspersed at every opportunity to demonstrate the shallowness of the minority "dominant Anglo-Saxon culture." The chapter on religion isn't about religion at all--it is about the anti's--anti-Semitism, KuKluxKlan, anti-Catholicism, anti-muslim, etc.

I had this book checked out about 8 weeks from the Ohio State University Libraries. It was quite a challenge.

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