Assimilation 101
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Transcript of Assimilation 101
Assimilation 101Into the Melting Pot!
Today’s ObjectivesUnderstand the patterns of assimilation Analyze this theory referred to as the “melting pot”Connecting new wave immigration w/ ethnic identities
A critique to hegemonic forms of administering difference
Assimilation A process in which formerly distinct and separate groups come to share a common culture and merge together socially As a society undergoes assimilation, differences among groups begin to decrease
Pluralism Exists when groups maintain their individual identities In a pluralistic society, groups remain separate, and the cultural and social differences persists over time
Assimilation and Pluralism
Assimilation and pluralism are contradictory processes
Not mutually exclusive May occur together in a variety of combinations Some groups may be assimilating Others are maintaining or even increasing differences
‘Traditional’ Perspective on Assimilation
Robert Park’s “Race Relations Cycle” Contact – E.g.: American War of Expansion V. MexicoCompetition – E.g.: WASP V. Mexican/Indigenous PeoplesAccommodation – E.g.: Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo/Brown V. Board of Education/Civil Rights AmendmentsAssimilation – E.g.: “Hispanics” make great salsa!
Melting Pot“Every nation, upon examination, turns out to have been a more or less successful melting pot.”
– Robert Park, 1930.
What is a Melting Pot? All people, regardless of race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, religion, or any other myriad of differences, are able to become part of the dominant group.
But what is the dominant group everybody is aspiring to?
And are all people, regardless of “ “, allowed to be part of the dominant group? Doesn’t the very term dominant group suggest a minority group? And if there is a dominant-minority group dichotomy, than what is the melting pot but an illusion of equality?
Fill in the Blank -- American
“With the exception of Native Americans, ethnic groups in America are transplanted peoples, far removed in time and space from their original homelands. The necessity of adapting to life in America made assimilation progressive and irreversible. (Steinberg, 322)
Case study: From Immigrants to White-
Ethnics1820s–1920s about 40 million Europeans immigrated to United States
Dramatically increased population
European labor facilitated industrialization
Increased U.S. military and political power
Assimilation and Ethnicity via
Miscegenation“Today there is an emerging consensus that the descendants of the great waves of European immigration have reached an advanced stage of assimilation. The most striking evidence is provided by the soaring rates of intermarriage across ethnic lines” (323).
White Ethnics Intermarriage Rates: Enter Euro-AmericanGermans – 53%Irish – 65%English – 62% Italians – 73% French – 78%Scots – 82%Poles – 84% Jews – 50%
New Wave Immigration Since the 1960’s, the United States has experienced what sociologists and immigration policy analysts are calling “new wave immigrants”Contemporary patterns of immigration in the U.S. are largely composed by people of color
Asia Latin AmericaCaribbean
Is Assimilation Dead? On the contrary, “new immigrants are not only assimilating but are doing so at an even faster rate than did earlier immigrants from Europe” (323). Patterns of Language
First generation – Immigrants retain native tongues Second generation – children bilingual Third generation – vast majority as monolingual
Assimilation Patterns The importance of generations
The first generation slightly acculturated and integrated
The second generation very acculturated and highly integrated in secondary sectors
The third generation enjoyed high levels of integration at both the secondary and the primary levels
Intermarriage Among P.o.C.
“If loss of a native language marks the beginning of the assimilation process, marriage across ethnic lines represents the last (or next to last) stage” (324).
Asians born in the U.S. marrying non-Asians: Vietnamese – 22% Japanese – 31% Asian Indians – 38%Chinese – 46%Filipinos – 65% Koreans – 72%
U.S. born Hispanics marrying non-Hispanics: 33% married to non-Hispanic Whites
New amalgam“This is the literal meaning of a melting pot and a fulfillment of Robert Park’s prescient observation that every nation is “more or less successful melting pot.” Like it or not, and the dissent of the ethnic pluralists is clear, assimilation does appear to be progressive and irreversible, the inexorable by-product of forces put into motion by the very act of immigrating” (324).
The Black ExperienceHowever, Steinberg points that the melting pot theory has been inclusive of everybody EXCEPT Africans and later African-Americans: black bodies.
WHY?
“The problem here, as James Baldwin observed, is that the crimes of the past are used to gloss over the crimes of the present” (325).
Historical legacy rooted in racism; white supremacy; the plantation economy mentality
¼ of all blacks and ½ of black youth live below the poverty line Residential housing rooted on de-facto segregation-logic
Ghettoization V. white surburbia
Hegemonic-Approaches to Difference
“A person is of Spanish/Hispanic origin if the person’s origin (ancestry) is Mexican, Mexican American, Chicano, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Ecuadoran, Guatemalan, Honduran, Nicaraguan, Peruvian, Salvadoran; from other Spanish-speaking countries of the Caribbean or Central or South America; or from Spain.”
Problematics of…Erases specific-historical experiences rooted in colonialism Erases cultural-differences Pacifies/neutralizes political-identities rooted in resistance Erases class experiences and neglects the many different linguistic, racial, and ethnic groups within different nationalities themselves
Indigenous populations Descendents of enslaved AfricansWave of immigrant populations from every country in Europe, Asia, the Middle East