The United States has not only been a nation of immigrants, it has also historically been the leading immigrant-receiving country. During the nineteenth century, 60 percent of the world’s immigrants came to America. It remained the chief immigrant-receiving country in the twentieth century. But the United States is also as nation of xenophobia, the fear and hatred of strangers, foreigners, and immigrants. Germans, Irish, Chinese, Italians, Japanese, Latinos, Eastern Europeans, Catholics, Jews, and Muslims have all been the targets of American hate and efforts to prevent them from entering the United States. While religion has often been a factor in determining which foreigners are targeted for discrimination, race has been “the single most important factor.” This is because xenophobia is a form of racism.
― “History shows that xenophobia has been a constant and defining feature of American life.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans: A History of Xenophobia in the United States
Author and historian Erika Lee is a Professor of History at Harvard University. Previously, she was Director of the Immigration History Research Center at the University of Minnesota. She is also a past president of the Organization of American Historians. Lee is the granddaughter of Chinese immigrants.
In America for Americans, the author reviews the long history of xenophobia in the United States. If we are to overcome xenophobia in America, Lee says it’s important to know its complex history. Sadly, xenophobia continues to be injected into America’s politics. In her introduction, Lee recalls the 2016 Republican National Convention in which “the GOP platform, put forward by Donald Trump, was one of pure xenophobia.”
After a stunning introduction, Lee covers the history of xenophobia in the United States in nine chapters.
Chapter 1 - In one of the earliest instances of xenophobia, we find Benjamin Franklin lamenting the large number of “swarthy” foreigners that were flooding the colonies in pre-Revolutionary Pennsylvania. Who were these dark foreigners that earned Franklin’s ire in 1755? German immigrants. Their offense? They were “strangers to our language and constitutions.” The American colonies were English colonies, and the non-Englishness of the Germans was disturbing to many of the colonists. It was argued that they brought crime and poverty. Therefore, Franklin passionately argued that German immigration “was a danger that must be checked.” Pennsylvania’s concerns about German immigration led to some of the first immigration regulations in the colonies. Germans became the object of group-based discrimination that would become “one of the hallmarks of xenophobia in the United States.”
― “The arguments used against Germans established a template of anti-immigrant attitudes, prejudice, and rhetoric that would be repeated and refashioned for later immigrant groups.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 2 - By the middle of the nineteenth century, a new group of immigrants was viewed as a threat to America—Catholics, especially Irish Catholics. This hate would give rise to a new political party, the anti-immigrant, anti-Catholic American Party, also known as the Know Nothing Party. Their hate would also lead to another common feature of xenophobia—conspiracy theories; the Know Nothings “were convinced that Catholic immigrants were part of a papal conspiracy to infiltrate America.” Many also believed that Catholics were interfering in elections. They also charged that Catholics were “criminals.” In Louisville, armed men gathered at polling stations to prevent immigrants from voting. They also set fire to German and Irish homes and businesses. Anti-Catholic laws were enacted in several states.
― “It was a heightened and almost hysterical fear that Catholic outsiders were intent on taking over the United States.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 3 – In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, the hatred of Chinese immigrants was particularly cruel and vicious. The charge against the Chinese was that they were criminals (sound familiar?) and undercut American workers. Their opponents also claimed that they never be able to become “Americans.” Some feared that the Chinese would occupy the entire west coast “to the exclusion of the white population.” Although the Chinese entering the United States were only a small fraction of the total number of immigrants, opponents eventually achieved their goal of legalized xenophobia with the passage of the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act. The act suspended Chinese immigration for ten years and declared Chinese immigrants ineligible for naturalization.
― “The Chinese Exclusion Act was supposed to be a temporary measure , but it ended up lasting for sixty-one years.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 4 – By the late nineteenth century, a new group of immigrants became the target of race-based hatred: southern and eastern Europeans. This included Italians, Greeks, Slavs, Russians, Hungarians and Poles. The influx of these people led to the formation of the Immigration Restriction League (IRL). Their goal was to craft a new xenophobic message designed to influence policy. This group would embrace eugenics, the biological engineering of the nation’s population through direct state intervention. The IRL would directly lobby lawmakers to adopt immigration restrictions in order to manage the racial makeup of the nation.
― “But for the IRL, racial differences and superiority was not just a matter of white versus nonwhites. It was a matter of different kinds of whiteness.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 5 – The Great Depression led to an effort to remove Mexicans from America by mass deportation, including naturalized citizens and those who were US citizens by birth. The charges against them were familiar: they were inferior; they were criminals; they took jobs from deserving Americans; they were likely “vermin infested.” They were even blamed for the mounting economic crisis.
― “…the construction of Mexicans as ‘illegal aliens’ applied not only to recent arrivals but to naturalized US citizens and American-born citizens as well.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 6 – Most readers of history are familiar with the rise in anti-Japanese sentiment after Pearl Harbor. They are likewise acquainted with the internment of Japanese Americans, without trial. Two-thirds of those incarcerated were American-born citizens. The US government invoked “military necessity.” But you might not know that the US government also orchestrated the forceable deportation of individuals of Japanese descent in Latin American countries. They were brought to the United States and many of them were sent to Japan in exchange for American citizens in Japan. After the war, they were charged with being in the US without permission! One thousand were deported to Japan; many of whom had never been to Japan. None of them had been charged with crimes, and none of them were ever given hearings. But then anti-Asian sentiment in the US had existed for many years.
― “They represented less than one-tenth of one percent of the total US population, but they had long been victims of a powerful anti-Japanese xenophobia that portrayed them as a national security threat even before Pearl Harbor.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 7 – The 1965 Immigration Act abolished the discriminatory national origins quotas, a highly restrictive and quantitatively discriminatory system that had existed in the US since 1924 and gave preference to skills. But it only “masked the perseverance of xenophobia” that existed in America, even during the civil rights era. While setting many things right, the law imposed a ceiling on immigration from the Western Hemisphere. This led to a dramatic increase in the number of immigrants entering the US without authorization. Why? Many American employers relied on labor from Mexico.
― “At a time when the United States emphasized its virtues of freedom and democracy over the totalitarianism of communism, the unequal treatment of immigrants based on race exposed the hypocrisy in American immigration regulation.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 8 – Since the middle of the 20th century, race continued to fuel xenophobia. The continuing war on immigration fueled a proliferation of stereotypical depictions of Mexicans and Mexican Americans linking them to crime and poverty. The phrase “illegal aliens” was often used to refer to Mexicans. Xenophobia had been legitimized as a powerful tool in American politics, framing undocumented immigrants as violent criminals. The chapter also demonstrates how much the Obama and Clinton administrations did to curb illegal immigration—efforts that few conservatives recognize.
― “By the early twenty-first century, the xenophobic message that Mexican immigration was endangering America had become so normalized that it helped propel Donald Trump to the White House in 2016.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Chapter 9 – This chapter addresses growing Islamophobia in the United States. By the twenty-first century, many Americans had developed an unfavorable opinion of Islam. Americans saw Islam as more violent than other faiths. This led to an irrational hate and fear of Muslims. Although the fear of Islam grew after 9/11, the author shows that Islamophobia had a long history in the US. In the years after 9/11, more than 200,000 Arabs and Muslims were registered and tracked by US officials. Not one committed an act of terrorism; instead, many of them were the victims of hate crimes.
― “Their small number underscores the irrationality and symbolic nature of Islamophobic rhetoric and politics.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
Epilogue to the Paperback Edition – The epilogue demonstrates how the COVID-19 pandemic amplified xenophobia in the US. Anti-Asian hate incidents rose dramatically. President Trump’s actions during the pandemic, including his racist use of the phrase “China virus” and his “blame China” approach, unnecessarily made xenophobia a key part of the nation’s response. It increased division at a time when unity was needed. These actions exacerbated the pandemic and cost lives. Trump also took advantage of the health crisis to implement new, extreme and harmful immigration policies.
― “The pandemic also occurred under a divisive president who spread misinformation, politicized the public health cry, and promoted xenophobia and racism.”
― Erika Lee, America for Americans
In her book America for Americans, author Erika Lee shows that an irrational fear, hatred, and hostility toward immigrants has been a defining feature of our nation from the colonial era to the present day. Lee provides a comprehensive survey of xenophobia in America. Every page is filled with the evidence. While there are those who might see hatred as a thing of the past, Lee makes it clear that xenophobia has continued to the present day. This is a must-read for every American who envisions a kinder, gracious, more race-tolerant future for America.