[On January 1,
1892, Ellis
Island immigration station opened in New York Harbor. Nearly 500,000
immigrants came through the station in its first year, and the rest is history.
Very complex history, though, and so this week for Ellis’s 125th
anniversary I’ve analyzed five contexts for the station and the immigration
stories to which it connects. Leading up to this special weekend post on sites
of 21st century immigration!]
Three
contemporary sites that could be described as 21st century Ellis
Islands.
1)
That Damn Wall: If, as I argued in yesterday’s
post, Ellis Island had stages and sides that have to be contextualized through
the history of exclusionary visions of American identity and community, Donald
Trump’s proposed “big beautiful wall” on the border with Mexico is
something much simpler still: one giant embodiment of exclusion. I don’t expect
that such a wall will ever be built in actuality, but regardless it’s hard to
imagine a more potent symbolic representation of immigration narratives and
policies that seek to define us as much by whom we keep out as whom we let in.
Although we don’t like to admit it, our immigration laws have been connected to
such questions for as long as we’ve had immigration laws (indeed, I argue in my
third book that our immigration laws developed at all in order to create
such discriminatory hierarchies), and so was Ellis Island in all too many ways.
2)
Monticello (on July 4th): It was far
more difficult for me to think of one site that could rival Ellis as a 21st
century representation of an inclusive vision of America defined by the shared
experiences of immigration. As I wrote earlier in the week, not all early 20th
century immigrants came through Ellis by any means—but certainly many did, many
tens of millions in fact. Whereas these days, immigrants arrive at every
airport, every port, every border crossing, in so many spaces and ways. Yet
there are still some experiences shared by many of those immigrant Americans,
and the citizenship process is one such inclusive and inspiring (if also
expensive and frustrating and often still too exclusionary) experience. Every
July 4th, a group of immigrant Americans gather at Thomas
Jefferson’s Monticello to become American citizens, one of many such
ceremonies around the United States but a particularly evocative and symbolic
one given the setting. So that’s one nominee for a moment and space that embody
the best of what Ellis Island likewise comprised.
3)
Define
American: I’ve written before about José
Antonio Vargas’ wonderful site, and won’t repeat those points here. Instead,
I’ll just say that if there were to be a 21st century Ellis Island,
it would make all the sense in the world for it to be a digital rather than
physical site. As I’ve argued all week, Ellis was never just or even mainly the
actual place, important as those facilities were for so many individuals and
families and communities. It was also and especially the images and narratives,
the ideas of immigration and America, the best and worst visions of our
national community. The kinds of conversations and debates that now happen most
consistently in online settings, ones with just as much at stake and the
potential to affect our society just as fully as did the lines and questions
and opportunities and quarantines of Ellis Island. Vargas and his site model
the best of those 21st century spaces and communities, and since I’m
an optimism—yes, even now—I’ll end this series there.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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