Skip to main content
Displaying 1 of 1
America for Americans : a history of xenophobia in the United States
2019
Availability
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Library Journal Review
Part of the American mythos is that America is a nation of immigrants. While there is truth in that, Lee (history, Univ of Minnesota; The Making of Asian America: A History) exposes another truth: America is also a nation of xenophobes. This book examines different episodes of xenophobia in American history, from Benjamin Franklin's writings against German immigrants in the mid-18th century and the Know Nothings' campaigns against Irish immigrants and the Chinese Exclusion Act of the 19th century to the 1924 Immigration Act and Japanese-American internment of the early 20th century, discrimination against Mexican and Muslim immigrants in recent decades, and more. Immigration restriction is a central hallmark of President Trump's administration. Lee reveals that the rhetoric Trump and his supporters employ when speaking about immigration and immigrants--fears about bringing crime, taking away jobs, failing to assimilate--has long been part of American political discourse from Colonial times to the present. VERDICT This thoroughly researched, informative, and lucid work is essential reading for anyone interested in the history of anti-immigrant sentiment in the United States, and how it influences the current political environment.--Joshua Wallace, Tarleton State Univ. Lib. Stephenville, TX
Publishers Weekly Review
As University of Minnesota historian Lee (The Making of Asian America) demonstrates in this fascinating but disturbing study, xenophobia is not "an exception to America's immigration tradition" but is as American as apple pie. Moreover, hostility to migrants, she argues, has derived far more from racist ideologies than it has from anxieties about foreign policy or economic concerns. Lee takes a chronological approach to this topic, starting with Benjamin Franklin's fears regarding newly arrived Germans in pre-Revolutionary Pennsylvania and moving on to the mid-19th-century "Know Nothing" party's hatred for Irish Catholics, the federal government's exclusion of Chinese migrants at the end of the 19th century, the Bostonian intellectual elite's early-20th-century dismissal of Jews and Eastern Europeans as "beaten men from beaten races" in the early 20th century, and the demonization of Japanese immigrants for decades prior to Pearl Harbor. While readers might be tempted to see these events as dark but foregone moments in the nation's history, Lee's later sections make it clear that similar anxieties continue to legitimize fear and hatred of Mexicans and Muslims, and even of "model minority" groups of Asian Americans. She persuasively expresses that current hostilities over national borders are no exception to the nation's history. This clearly organized and lucidly written book should be read by a wide audience. (Nov.)
Librarian's View
Displaying 1 of 1