Essays on Immigration

Essays on Immigration
Author: Bob Blaisdell
Publsiher: Courier Corporation
Total Pages: 240
Release: 2013-11-19
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 9780486783208

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This anthology surveys the immigration experience from a wide range of cultural and historical viewpoints. Contributors include Jacob Riis, Edwidge Danticat, Junot Díaz, and many others.

Immigration Essays

Immigration Essays
Author: Sybil Baker
Publsiher: C&r Press
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1936196573

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"From her childhoom home near Ferguson, Missouri, to her travels as an expatriate living in Asia, to the troubled cities of Eastern Europe, Baker explores the physical and emotional wanderings of what Mary McCarthy calls 'exiles, expatriates, and internal emigres.' Using photos, literature, and her own family's slave-owning history, Baker excavates her past as well as Chattanooga's to try and understand the ghosts that haunt her and the city she inhabits."--Page [4] of cover.

Becoming American

Becoming American
Author: Meri Nana-Ama Danquah
Publsiher: Hyperion
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2001-08-08
Genre: Current Events
ISBN: 078688343X

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Now in paperback -- "A compelling collection . . . providing insights into the variety of immigrant experiences." --Publishers Weekly Take part in an extraordinary journey through the lives of 23 first-generation immigrant women as they uncover their own unique experiences in the new world. In this remarkable collection of original essays, these acclaimed writers speak to issues of identity, ethnicity, and race, as well as how the self begins to take on and absorb the label "American." Some of the contributors in Becoming American include: Nina Barragan -- Argentina; Lilianet Brintrup -- Chile; Veronica Chambers -- Panama; Judith Ortiz Cofer -- Puerto Rico; Edwidge Danticat -- Haiti; Gabrielle Donnelly -- England; Lynn Freed -- South Africa; Akuyoe Graham -- Ghana; Lucy Grealy -- Ireland; Suheir Hammad -- Jordan/Palestine; Ginu Kamani -- India; Nola Kambanda -- Burundi/Rwanda; Helen Kim -- Korea; Kyoko Mori -- Japan; Irina Reyn -- Russia; Joyce Zonana -- Egypt

Germans in the New World

Germans in the New World
Author: Frederick C. Luebke
Publsiher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 1999
Genre: History
ISBN: 0252068475

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Provides history of German immigrants in the United States and Brazil that ranges from institutional and state history to comparative studies on an intercontinental scale. This book offers both a record of an individual odyssey within immigration history and a statement about the need for thoughtful reflections on the field.

The Good Immigrant

The Good Immigrant
Author: Nikesh Shukla,Chimene Suleyman
Publsiher: Little, Brown
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2019-02-19
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780316524292

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By turns heartbreaking and hilarious, troubling and uplifting, these "electric" essays come together to create a provocative, conversation-sparking, multivocal portrait of modern America (The Washington Post). From Trump's proposed border wall and travel ban to the marching of white supremacists in Charlottesville, America is consumed by tensions over immigration and the question of which bodies are welcome. In this much-anticipated follow-up to the bestselling UK edition, hailed by Zadie Smith as "lively and vital," editors Nikesh Shukla and Chimene Suleyman hand the microphone to an incredible range of writers whose humanity and right to be here is under attack. Chigozie Obioma unpacks an Igbo proverb that helped him navigate his journey to America from Nigeria. Jenny Zhang analyzes cultural appropriation in 90s fashion, recalling her own pain and confusion as a teenager trying to fit in. Fatimah Asghar describes the flood of memory and emotion triggered by an encounter with an Uber driver from Kashmir. Alexander Chee writes of a visit to Korea that changed his relationship to his heritage. These writers, and the many others in this urgent collection, share powerful personal stories of living between cultures and languages while struggling to figure out who they are and where they belong.

Citizens Strangers And In betweens

Citizens  Strangers  And In betweens
Author: Peter Schuck
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 476
Release: 2018-03-09
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780429981241

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Immigration is one of the critical issues of our time. In Citizens, Strangers, and In-Betweens, an integrated series of fourteen essays, Yale professor Peter Schuck analyzes the complex social forces that have been unleashed by unprecedented legal and illegal migration to the United States, forces that are reshaping American society in countless ways. Schuck first presents the demographic, political, economic, legal, and cultural contexts in which these transformations are occurring. He then shows how the courts, Congress, and the states are responding to the tensions created by recent immigration. Next, he explores the nature of American citizenship, challenging traditional ways of defining the national community and analyzing the controversial topics of citizenship for illegal alien children, the devaluation and revaluation of American citizenship, and plural citizenship. In a concluding section, Schuck focuses on four vital and explosive policy issues: immigration's effects on the civil rights movement, the cultural differences among various American ethnic groups as revealed in their experiences as immigrants throughout the world, the protection of refugees fleeing persecution, and immigration's effects on American society in recent years.

Austrian Immigration to Canada

Austrian Immigration to Canada
Author: Franz Szabo
Publsiher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP
Total Pages: 207
Release: 1996-04-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780773584945

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This collection of nine essays originated in a symposium on Austrian immigration to Canada held at Carleton University in May 1995. Held in conjunction with the larger Austrian immigration to Canada research project, initiated to mark the Austrian millennium in 1996, the conference brought together European and Canadian scholars from several disciplines. The full range of immigrant and refugee experience in Canada is addressed: culture, politics, demographics, identity, language, memory, hardship and achievement.

Immigration and Social Systems

Immigration and Social Systems
Author: Christina Boswell,Gianni D'Amato
Publsiher: Amsterdam University Press
Total Pages: 486
Release: 2012-08-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9789089644534

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Michael Bommes (1954–2010) was one the most brilliant and original scholars of migration studies in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. This posthumously published collection brings together a selection of his most important essays on immigration, transnationalism, irregular migration, and migrant networks. “In Bommes, the academy lost a scholar with penetrating analyses of migration, the welfare state and social systems where the two interact. By completing his last project, Boswell and D'Amato have done scholarship a lasting service. A major contribution to public debate and a tribute to a very great man.”—Randall Hansen, University of Toronto