The 11th Annual Zócalo Book Prize and 10th Annual Poetry Prize – FESCH.TV
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The year 1924 was a watershed in American immigration. A victory for the eugenics movement, the Johnson-Reed Act established race-based quotas that succeeded in limiting the entry of Jews and Catholics from Southern and Eastern Europe, as well as strengthening restrictions already in place barring the entry of Asians and Africans. It would take an extraordinary political window following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy to overhaul the quota system through the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965. By giving preference to family reunification and skilled workers, the legislation changed the demographics of the country, making it less European and less white. At the same time, it imposed the first numerical cap on Western Hemisphere immigration, making the U.S. less accessible for people coming from Mexico and other Latin American countries.
What lessons can we draw from these two historic shifts in American immigration? Has the United States ever been the nation of immigrants that it purports to be? And in our polarized times, can we fashion a new national identity that embraces immigrants and their families?
New York Times national editor Jia Lynn Yang, winner of the 11th annual Zócalo Public Square Book Prize for her debut book, “One Mighty and Irresistible Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration, 1924-1965,” visited Zócalo to discuss how immigration laws have changed the American population, our communities, and the country’s sense of itself. This online event was moderated by Tomás Jiménez, professor of Sociology at Stanford University and author of “The Other Side of Assimilation: How Immigrants are Changing American Life.” Read more about Yang here:
Angelica Esquivel, winner of the 10th Annual Zócalo Poetry Prize, delivered a public reading of her winning poem, “La Mujer,” prior to the lecture. Read more about Esquivel here:
For a full report on the live discussion, check out the Takeaway:
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