Friday, September 26, 2014
Illegal Immigration Is Nothing New
The website I have lined up here sheds some light on the idea that most immigrants that came in the nineteenth century would have a very hard time meeting the requirements to immigrate today. Immigration is still a very hot topic and makes the headlines every other day it seems. This website suggests that immigration is a fluid concept in the United Staes and has and still is open for debate. It is my belief that all people, from everywhere should be able to come to America and get their citizenship. This is not a country where you are judged by who your father was but you are judged by your actions. Your life is not predetermined here. Immigration Policy Center
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
"Creating Something Entirely New"
The article I found was pulled from the Tenement Museum's website which we checked out briefly in class. It grabbed my attention as it is about Germans and their contribution to the beer culture and industry in early America. Brewing beer was an iconic trade that they brought with them when the moved to the United States. The article mentions a few different types of beer and in particular lagers and pilsners which the Germans are famous for making. When they brought these styles of beers to the United States no one was drinking them;they revolutionized beer drinking and brewing in America. Budweiser, Coors, and Miller are all examples of lagers and are some of the most prolific beers on grocery store shelves all of which were brewed originally by German Americans. I moved to Santa Clara about three years ago from Portland Oregon, which some would consider the craft beer capitol of the world and I must admit that I am a lover of craft beer so that is really what drew my attention to this piece. I also found it very interesting how Nick Capodice and Kira Garcia, writing for the Tenement Museum, reminded me of the chapter from this week. They state, "However, they’d (the two people who owned the bar in the tenements) both lived in New York City since their early teens, so they weren’t trying to recreate ‘home’. I think they were trying to create something entirely new. Sure, they were all speaking German, but the clientele was a hodgepodge of folks from all over the place. They’d be talking about home, sure, but they’d be talking about American politics, rent, love, and all the things we talk about when we talk at bars." This perfectly sums up the way in which the German Americans must have felt; glad to be in America but stoically hanging on to the culture that made them so. You can access the article here: Tenement Museum
Monday, September 8, 2014
"No Irish Need Apply"
Having a heritage of both German and Scotch-Irish decent I found this weeks readings and lectures very interesting. The struggles that my ancestors must have faced I have a hard time even imagining. Life for them was a day to day fight for survival. I was aware or some of the hardships faced by the early Irish immigrants to the United States but what really surprised me was that they were even discriminated against by there our Irish predecessors. Hence that is where we get the term Scotch Irish. As the old pioneer Scotch-Irish didn't want to be lumped together with this new round of destitute, rough, Irish they created the term to segregate themselves form each other. It is unfortunate that people can be so shortsighted about what and where they came from, so much so that they would cast off their countrymen. The Irish that came over after the potato famine were not welcomed and the old Irish and the new cast of Americans immigrants made that very clear.
http://www.newsleader.com/story/news/history/2014/08/15/tolerance-intolerance-mark-area-immigrant-story/14149553/
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