How Race Is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts
Subject
: Mexican Americans—Social conditions—20th century, Immigrants, Citizenship, States—Emigration and immigration, Government policy, United States—Race relations
Publisher
: University of California Press
Summary :How Race Is Made in America examines Mexican immigration from 1924
to 1965 in order to understand how race and citizenship were constructed
during this crucial period. I demonstrate that what was unique about these
years was the emergence of what I call an immigration regime that remade
racial categories that still shape the way we think about race, and specifi cally
Mexicans. Th rough an examination of a diverse array of legal, po liti cal, social,
and cultural sources related to the immigration regime, I off er historical
answers as to why Mexican Americans are still not deemed fully American
and are largely equated with illegality.
Th e period between 1924 and 1965 is fascinating for anyone interested in
the evolution of racial identities in the United States. From 1917 to 1924 a
series of legislative acts reduced immigration to the United States by 85 percent.
Th e year 1924 marks the passage of the capstone immigration act, the
Johnson- Reed Immigration Act, which limited the number of immigrants
permitted entry from specifi c countries, thereby drastically reducing the entry
of southern and eastern Eu ro pe ans (mostly Jews), who were deemed inferior
“breeds.” Th e Act also prohibited groups deemed ineligible for naturalization,
specifi cally Chinese, Japa nese, and other Asians, who were already facing
severe immigration restrictions. Th e 1924 Immigration Act was the nation’s
fi rst comprehensive restriction law. It remapped the nation in terms of new
ethnic and racial identities, specifi cally transforming denigrated Eu ro pe an
ethnics into “whites” while simultaneously criminalizing Mexicans as illegal
workers who crossed into the United States without authorization. In the four de cades that followed, immigration laws fundamentally shaped the
pa ram e ters of race in America. I end my study in 1965, which ushered in a new
immigration regime with the passage of the 1965 Immigration and Nationality
Act, abolishing the quotas established by the 1924 Act.
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