Oct 14, 2019

Was Christopher Columbus "Black"?

     An excellent New York Times story explores Italian Immigration to the U.S., reporting many were treated the same as African-Americans:


"As the historian Matthew Frye Jacobson shows in his immigrant history “Whiteness of a Different Color,” the surge of newcomers engendered a national panic and led Americans to adopt a more restrictive, politicized view of how whiteness was to be allocated. Journalists, politicians, social scientists and immigration officials embraced the habit, separating ostensibly white Europeans into “races.” Some were designated “whiter” — and more worthy of citizenship — than others, while some were ranked as too close to blackness to be socially redeemable. The story of how Italian immigrants went from racialized pariah status in the 19th century to white Americans in good standing in the 20th offers a window onto the alchemy through which race is constructed in the United States, and how racial hierarchies can sometimes change."

In Alabama, Birmingham came to be referred to as Little Italy because so many Italians immigrated to the "new" city. 

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