Pres. Rhetoric, 16: Who Belongs In America?: Presidents, Rhetoric, and ImmigrationVanessa B. Beasley Texas A&M University Press, 2006 - 294 páginas "How can the immigrant of yesterday be lionized as the very foundation of the nation's character, while the immigrant of today is often demonized as a threat to the nation's safety and stability?" ask volume editor Vanessa B. Beasley in her introduction to this timely book. As the nation's ceremonial as well as political leader, presidents through their rhetoric help to create the frame for the American public's understanding of immigration. In an overarching essay and ten case studies, Who Belongs in America? Explores select moments in U.S. immigration history, focusing on the presidential discourse that preceded, address, or otherwise corresponded to events. These chapters, which originated as presentations at the Texas A&M University Conference on Presidential Rhetoric, share a common interest in how, when and under what circumstances U.S. presidents or their administrations have negotiated the tension that lies at the heart of the immigration issue in the United States. The various authors look at the dual views of immigrants as either scapegoats for cultural fears, especially during trying times. U.S. presidents have had to navigate between these two motifs, and they have chosen different ways to do so. Indeed, as these studies show, their words have sometimes been at odds with their deeds and policies. Since 9/11, few issues have more public significance than how America views immigrants. The contributors to this volume provide context that will help inform the public debate, as well as the scholarship, for years to come. Vanessa B. Beasley, an associate professor of communication at the University of Georgia, is the author of You, the People: American National Identity in Presidential Rhetoric, also published by Texas A&M University Press. Her Ph.D. is from the University of Texas at Austin. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 62
... economic circumstances that have driven the American people's simultaneous need for and fear of immigrants. Of course, U.S. presidents always face constraints on both their words and their deeds, no matter the topic. As Martin ...
... economy.6 Yet, even if we set economic worries aside, there have been and continue to be times in US. history when immigrants have been feared for other reasons. Obviously the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, are a recent and ...
... economic necessity demanded," according to Kraut.11 In spite of such harsh realities, however, the stereotype of the cheerful, hard-working, optimistic immigrant continued to thrive within US. popular and political culture. "The stories ...
... economic fears—fears that immigrants will undercut wages, fears that immigrants will take "American jobs," and fears that immigrants will "drain" the US. economy by taking away more funds through their use of social services than they ...
... economy, according to Reimers. More specifically, he argues, since the 1980s immigration debates in the United States ... economic fears, these measures were also driven by a second set of fears. These fears are more cultural in nature ...
Contenido
19 | |
37 | |
Presidents and Religious Diversity in the Nineteenth | 61 |
Causes and Consequences | 89 |
Woodrow Wilson 5 War Rhetoric | 107 |
Immigration and the Red Scare | 134 |
Can the Alien Speak? The McCarranWalter Act | 149 |
Hector | 183 |
Bush and Clinton Address | 206 |
Presidential | 247 |
Afterword A New Hope or a Recurring Fear? | 272 |
Contributors | 279 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Who Belongs in America?: Presidents, Rhetoric, and Immigration Vanessa B. Beasley Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Who Belongs in America?: Presidents, Rhetoric, and Immigration Vanessa B. Beasley Vista previa limitada - 2006 |
Who Belongs in America?: Presidents, Rhetoric, and Immigration Vanessa B. Beasley Vista de fragmentos - 2006 |