On the man and project that I wish we could all give our fullest support.
First, a link; not to
that post itself, although it’s interesting as always from Digby, but to the NYT Magazine story to which she links,
and which I believe you can read login-free if you go through her site. Jose
Antonio Vargas, the author of that Times
Magazine story, has been well-known
for some time as a Pulitzer-winning journalist; but in this lengthy and incredibly
powerful essay he outed himself as an undocumented immigrant, and more exactly
as precisely the kind of American identity whom the
DREAM Act is meant to aid—came to the US as a very young kid, made a
success of himself in this home land including college and much after, and has
more than fulfilled every possible promise he possessed and opportunity he
earned.
Jose hasn’t stopped at sharing these potentially
controversial but also deeply inspiring personal experiences, though; he has
created a website and project, Define
American, where he hopes to use his story and the many, many American stories
like it to help revise and strengthen two types of crucial national narratives:
the specific ones about illegal immigrants and immigration overall; and the
broader and even more vital ones about who is and is not an American. It no
doubt goes without saying, even for those who know me only through this blog,
that I am fully and admiringly and gratefully in support of what he’s doing;
not only his work with these crucial national narratives, but also and even
more strikingly his willingness to open up about his own, far-too-often
attacked but entirely impressive, American identity and experiences.
On the other hand, I suppose it’s possible for someone to
dismiss Vargas’ efforts, his work to change these broader narratives, as simply
(or even partly) self-justification or –rationalization, as an attempt to
legitimize his own otherwise illegitimate identity. (I would hope that no one
would feel that way after reading his piece or checking out the website, but of
course a large part of adhering to simplistic narratives often entails not
engaging with the evidence and texts.) Which makes it that much more vital,
AmericanStudies Elves, for those of us with no conceivable personal stake in
this equation to express both support for Vargas and, even more significantly,
our own shared beliefs that if American is to mean anything genuine and
important, if it is to comprise a community that’s more than just geographic or
political or legal, that’s human and interconnected and inspiring, it simply
must include, and should in fact celebrate, an identity and life like Vargas’. So
Elves, I wish that we all could give Vargas’ site and project the attention it
deserves, and see where we go from there.
Final wish of mine tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you think? Responses to this wish? Wishes of your own
you’d share with the Elves?
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