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Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
A book is occasionally misunderstood or misappraised as something
it never had any intention of being. This one is not intended to be
a statistical immigration treatise, and still less a controversial
polemic. Nor has it any pre tension towards being a technical work
on sociology, politics, or economics. It pretends to show in
common, closeup, personal, human terms what kind of people
Americans of foreign-language origin are today, what they
contribute to the American scene, how they live in the land of
their adoption, how they are viewed and treated there. William
Seabrook writes about a numerically enormous element in the
population of the United States - certainly thirty million and
maybe forty million people, including babies, grandfathers, and
grownups now renamed Jones and Kelly. In a non-statistical,
human-interest picture such as this intends to be the actual number
of foreign-born immigrant American citizens, already close to
fifteen million, is a mere nucleus for the vast, incomputable total
who retain traces of their foreign language origin. All the Johns,
Jakes, Tonys, Mikes, Joes, Olafs, and Evas are real people, named
by their real names, and will perhaps cast more light on the
picture than the various celebrities. It is all straight reporting,
plus occasional obvious opinions of his own, and if he has reported
objectively rather than honestly it has been to shed a little light
on whether or not these groups are actually a menace, as some
highly vocal patriots believe. When he intrudes a little into the
field of political experts and propagandists it is only in relation
to whether or not the recently foreign element in Americas
population is a menace, or antagonistic, to Americas present basic
form of government and social fabric Where he mentions his own
sincere belief that the American is as good a basic form of
government and social fabric as has yet been tried - or imagined by
honest Utopians - he does it neither as a member of any privileged
class nor as a professional political commentator, but simply as an
average working American, neither rich nor poor, who likes his own
country the best, and hopes it will survive as a free democracy. If
he has presented any conclusion it is merely a general one that the
menace is nothing for anybody to sit up nights worrying about. If
his reporting seems consequently on the optimistic side it is
because what he saw and heard led him sincerely to believe that the
American Melting Pot - despite the fact that it bubbles, emits
steam, and occasionally has to be skimmed of scum - is producing a
good, sound, healthy conglomerate.This book is highly recommended
for inclusion on the bookshelf of anyone with an interest in the
history of immigration or society of America.
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