American Stereotypes of Immigrants

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America was widely known as a “melting pot” of sorts for many generations. The country earned its title by accepting immigrants of various cultures and molding, or melting, them into the American lifestyle. However, the “melting pot” idea of America is starting to dissipate. According to a Newsweek Poll on the public, “only 20 percent still think America is a melting pot” (Morganthau and Wolfberg, par.4). As more Americans push away immigrants and create stereotypes against said immigrants, America continues to lose its title as a “melting pot.” There is ethnic friction in America and people have begun to have a hard time assimilating (Morganthau and Wolfberg, par.18). .America is beginning to place a negative outlook on its culture. Authors Jack Shaheen, Richard Rodriguez, Peter Marin and Zora Neale Hurtson all shape American culture in a detrimental way.

Jack Shaheen’s essay “The Media’s Image of Arabs” explains how the media has birthed false images of Arabs. The media continues to maintain stereotypes of Arabs. The majority of Arab characters shown on the television are rarely shown as victims or ordinary people (Shaheen 85). If America were a melting pot, it would show diversity in a positive way. There would be more acceptance of Middle Eastern immigrants and their descendants. Likewise, Americans would be more accepting of all cultures that inhabit America. As a melting pot, the numerous cultures, races and individuals of America should blend together as a whole (Merriam-Webster). Though, America today is not blended. Americans as a group are not a whole, but they are made up of different groups sectioned off by invisible boundaries. In order for America to be the “melting pot” it is claimed to be, Ameri...

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...ican immigrants. He has published many works

including Hunger of Memory: The Education of Richard Rodriguez which is a collection

of autobiographical essays. He received his B.A. from Stanford University and his M.A.

from Columbia University.

Shaheen, Jack. “The Media’s Image of Arabs.” Writing on the River. 3rd ed. Boston: McGraw,

2012. 85-87. Print.

Jack Shaheen earned his Ph.D from the University of Missouri. He has been a professor

at multiple universities, a television reporter, and a radio announcer. Some of his works

include The TV Arab and Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People.

Stubblefield, Anna. "Racial Identity and Non-essentialism About Race." Wilson OmniFile Full

Text Mega Edition. H.W. Wilson, n.d. Web. 24 Nov. 2013.

Anna Stubblefield has very clear views on race and labeling. She wrote “Ethics Along

The Color Line.”

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