|
Product Description
How Race Is Made in America examines Mexican Americans―from 1924, when American law drastically reduced immigration into the United States, to 1965, when many quotas were abolished―to understand how broad themes of race and citizenship are constructed. These years shaped the emergence of what Natalia Molina describes as an immigration regime, which defined the racial categories that continue to influence perceptions in the United States about Mexican Americans, race, and ethnicity.
Molina demonstrates that despite the multiplicity of influences that help shape our concept of race, common themes prevail. Examining legal, political, social, and cultural sources related to immigration, she advances the theory that our understanding of race is socially constructed in relational ways―that is, in correspondence to other groups. Molina introduces and explains her central theory, racial scripts, which highlights the ways in which the lives of racialized groups are linked across time and space and thereby affect one another. How Race Is Made in America also shows that these racial scripts are easily adopted and adapted to apply to different racial groups.
Molina demonstrates that despite the multiplicity of influences that help shape our concept of race, common themes prevail. Examining legal, political, social, and cultural sources related to immigration, she advances the theory that our understanding of race is socially constructed in relational ways―that is, in correspondence to other groups. Molina introduces and explains her central theory, racial scripts, which highlights the ways in which the lives of racialized groups are linked across time and space and thereby affect one another. How Race Is Made in America also shows that these racial scripts are easily adopted and adapted to apply to different racial groups.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Deportation Nation: Outsiders in American History
- American Gulag: Inside U.S. Immigration Prisons
- How the Vote Was Won
- Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America - Updated Edition (Politics and Society in Modern America)
- Empires, Nations, and Families: A New History of the North American West, 1800-1860
- The Chinese Must Go: Violence, Exclusion, and the Making of the Alien in America
- A Misplaced Massacre: Struggling over the Memory of Sand Creek
- U.S. Central Americans: Reconstructing Memories, Struggles, and Communities of Resistance
- A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America
- Manifest Destinies 2e: The Making of the Mexican American Race
*If this is not the "How Race Is Made in America: Immigration, Citizenship, and the Historical Power of Racial Scripts (A" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Jan 26, 2025 17:38 +08.