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History Happenings Newsletter: Timely lessons and activities in history and social studies for users of ProQuest solutions
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  History Happenings Theme: Immigration
Welcome to ProQuest's History Happenings enewsletter. Below you'll find student activities centered on a broad theme, linked to historical events or premises. These thought-provoking lessons empower learners to think critically about current and historical events. Connections are provided to relevant content inside our award-winning digital learning solutions, including ProQuest Historical Newspapers, History Study Center, SIRS Decades, and CultureGrams' World Conflicts Today.



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  What We Talk About When We Talk About Immigration
Theme Overview
Many writers on the far right of the blogosphere complain that "you can't talk about immigration" in America -- not without someone on the far left calling you a racist at any rate.

But the truth is we talk about immigration all the time. Even saying "you can't talk about immigration" is, ironically enough, doing just that: talking about immigration.

But as you'll discover in this month's History Happenings newsletter, the ways we talk about immigration have evolved over time.

CNN's Lou Dobbs on Immigration
CNN's Lou Dobbs, one of the most recognizable faces in the fight
to curb illegal immigration, at the National Press Club in 2007.



 
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  There Will Be Blood
History Study Center
Immigration is a hot topic in British politics. Nigel Hastilow, a Conservative member of the British parliament, resigned on November 4, 2007. Why?

Because he refused to apologize for three of the words he had written in an op-ed piece on immigration. These were the words: "He was right."

But who was he (and was he right)?

There Will Be Blood Activity
The "he" at a book signing.


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The World Always Was Flat
ProQuest Historical Newspapers
The bill was essentially a bargain. It provided an amnesty to those who had already entered the country illegally while stopping others from coming in. But in practice, of course, it wasn't that simple.

Read more about the bill that billed itself as the bill to end all immigration bills.

Guerrilla firing an American gun in El Salvador
A guerrilla firing an American gun in El Salvador (1989).


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  Betrayed
World Conflicts Today
When the United States invaded Iraq in 2003, U.S. troops enlisted the interpreting services of many pro-American Iraqis.

How do our attitudes toward the Iraq war shape our perceptions of what we owe Iraqis who once helped Americans and now, fearing for their safety, want to emigrate to the United States?

Iraqi interpreter working with U.S. troops
Iraqi interpreter working with U.S. troops (Iraq, 2003).
 

(Don't) Give Me Your Huddled Masses
SIRS Decades
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At what point must a country of immigrants shut its doors?

That seemed to be a pressing question at both the turn of this century and the one before it.

But whereas the immigration debate is reported in mostly civil terms in today's press, it engendered all kinds of disparaging and insulting language in the op-ed pieces and editorial cartoons of the early 1900s. You'll find several examples inside SIRS Decades.

In the early 20th century, Americans who opposed the government's immigration policies often expressed that opposition in language that we would now regard as highly offensive.

For example, in a book review headlined "Social Deterioration of the United States from the Stream of Backward Immigrants," the reviewer warns against letting too many immigrants into the country on the grounds that they are typically "used to dirt floors, a vegetable diet, and child labor" and are "ignorant of underclothing [and] newspapers."

Quoting approvingly from Professor Edward Alsworth Ross's 1914 book The Old World in the New, the reviewer also tells us that immigrants by their mere presence "lower the general plane of intelligence." And he accuses immigration supporters of combining "facile lip-sympathy for immigrants" with "heartless indifference" to the poor Americans who suffer from the consequences of immigration.

The following cartoons, published in 1891 and 1904 respectively, make similar points. Both suggest that the United States -- through a combination of naivety and general goodheartedness -- is admitting foreigners who will bring with them anarchism, criminality, insanity, pauperism, and other social ills.

  1891 Anti-Immigration Cartoon   1904 Anti-Immigration Cartoon  1891 anti-immigration cartoon... ...and 1904.

Activity: Read the entire 1914 book review, then 1) identify the main arguments advanced against open, or liberal, immigration policies; 2) using these same arguments, write a short op-ed (opinion) piece that could be published in a mainstream newspaper today.

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