Manifest Destinies: Americanizing Immigrants and Internationalizing Americans

Manifest Destinies: Americanizing Immigrants and Internationalizing Americans

Manifest Destinies: Americanizing Immigrants and Internationalizing Americans

Manifest Destinies: Americanizing Immigrants and Internationalizing Americans

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Overview

At the turban of the century, America is both retrenching and expanding, becoming more restrictive and more expansive, more utilitarian and, more value- and religion-oriented. As was true a century ago, the flow of these changes is very much a story of immigrants, their lives in America, and the changing lives of those they join. This book examines the interaction of immigrants and the native-born in nine widely varying locales, including Richmond, VA, St. Louis, West Palm Beach, FL, Tacoma, WA, Garden City, KS, Dallas, Phoenix, San Francisco, and New York City.

The volume considers a broad range of immigrants from well-educated and economically successful Chinese and Indians, to legally recognized refugees, who often have more difficulty accommodating to U.S. society, to illegal immigrants, who are being Americanized to a shadow world of limited opportunity and limited protection. Through insight into the interactions between immigrants and native-born at the local level, the authors collectively sketch an America that is changing but also re-creating its past.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275967031
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 10/30/2000
Pages: 184
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)
Lexile: 1490L (what's this?)

About the Author

DAVID W. HAINES is Associate Professor of Anthropology at George Mason University. He is the editor of Refugees as Immigrants: Cambodians, Laotians, and Vietnamese in America (1989), Refugees in America in the 1990s (Greenwood, 1996), and co-editor of Illegal Immigration in America (Greenwood, 1999).

CAROL A. MORTLAND is Director of Museum Services at an interpretive center and museum in north central Oregon. She has conducted research on Southeast Asian refugees, particularly Cambodians, since 1981. She is co-editor of Cambodian Culture Since 1975: Homeland and Exile (1994) and editor of Diasporic Identity (1998).

Table of Contents

Introduction by Carol A. Mortland
St. Louis, Missouri: Social Convergence and Cultural Diversity among Immigrants and Refugees by Ann M. Rynearson
Dallas, Texas: Enclave and Suburb: Patterns and Reactions in Refugee-Host Interactions by Lance A. Rasbridge
Garden City, Kansas: Vietnamese Refugees, Mexican Immigrants, and the Changing Character of a Community by Janet E. Benson
West Palm Beach, Florida and Phoenix, Arizona: A Continuum of Response to the Mayan Presence by Nancy J. Wellmeier
Tacoma, Washington: Cambodian Adaptation and Community Response by Carol A. Mortland
Richmond, Virginia: Refugee Resettlement and Community Reaffirmation by David W. Haines, Marilyn Breslow, Dirk Philipsen, and Jan Williamson
San Francisco, California: From Enclave Small Business to High-Tech Industries: The Chinese in the San Francisco Bay Area by Bernard P. Wong
New York City: Economic Integration and Community Construction among Asian Indians by Johanna M. Lessinger
Afterword: Manifest Destinies by David W. Haines
Index

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