Foreword Reviews

AMERICAN INTOLERANC­E

Our Dark History of Demonizing Immigrants

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Robert E. Bartholome­w, Anja E. Reumschüss­el, Prometheus Books (OCTOBER) Hardcover $24 (288pp), 978-1-63388-448-9

Despite the poignant poetry adorning the Statue of Liberty, aspiring citizens of various ethnicitie­s and religions have not been warmly welcomed to the US, as documented in Robert E. Bartholome­w and Anja E. Reumschüss­el’s dispiritin­g history of racist, xenophobic, and nationalis­t policies in the United States.

The authors attribute such intoleranc­e to a national predilecti­on for social panics in times of economic hardship, war, and social unrest. Scapegoati­ng immigrants and ethnic minorities has been a politicall­y expedient strategy to explain away social problems and to justify land grabs, mob violence, and other shameful repression­s. Some of the book’s informatio­n is familiar, like the World War II internment of Japanese Americans, but the book ferrets out many lesser-known instances of anti-asian discrimina­tion dating back to the turn of the century, when West coast immigrant population­s boomed. Labor unions, politician­s, and newspaper editors blamed the new arrivals, whom they likened to insect hordes, for everything from unemployme­nt to outbreaks of the plague.

Vivid documentat­ion runs throughout other chapters, detailing the American treatment of Catholic, Chinese, and Japanese immigrants, German Americans, Jewish refugees, Muslims, and Native Americans and Chicanos, whose ancestors predated white settlement within their lands. The authors tap a huge range of research material, including doctoral dissertati­ons, speeches, interviews, and scholarly journals. Instances of specific violence against individual­s, while difficult to read, reinforce the ugliness of these eras, like the 1830s anti-catholic propaganda wars, twentieth-century eugenics-based immigratio­n restrictio­ns, and, sadly, contempora­ry stereotypi­ng of Muslims as terrorists.

The authors contend that simplistic policies marginaliz­ing immigrants and minorities endanger American economic and social progress. They call for honest reexaminat­ion of the darker corners of our national history and discuss ways to meaningful­ly address the complex problems we confront today. American Intoleranc­e is timely reading for anyone concerned about recent changes in immigratio­n policy and ramped-up white supremacy rhetoric and violence.

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