Impossible Subjects Summary

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In Mae Ngai’s, Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America, Ngai investigates the origins of illegal immigration within the United States, during the 20th century, by thoroughly examining landmark immigration policies implemented from 1924 - 1965. The book begins with the presentation of the Johnson-Reed Immigration Act of 1924 — the nation’s first holistic, restrictive law on immigration, which was then used as the foundation of Ngai’s argument on how the numerical limitations within immigration policies constructed “legal racialization” of ethnic groups that ultimately produced a new category “alien citizens” or perpetual foreigner within the American nation (Ngai 8). In doing so, Ngai’s detailedly documented the …show more content…

This lack in recognizing the individuality of citizens forced forced Ngai to regard an ethnicity as a whole rather than a community of different faction, which proved problematic in many situations in trying to analyze the effect of regulatory immigration policies. Speculating again on the Chinese exclusion acts, Ngai was clear that the Chinese American’s political and social standing in the United States varied greatly from the 1930s to the 1960s, depending on stance that the United States posed in foreign policy and national interest (Ngai 203). For instance, a friendly gestured of repealing Chinese exclusion acts was made by the Congress to the Republic of China during the 1940s as a wartime effort of recognizing the Chinese Nationalist as an important ally against fighting the Japanese in the Pacific, compared to the cold response to the Chinese Communist Revolution of 1949 which reverted the repeal to its previous exclusion state due to anti-communism, clearly shows that, in terms of Chinese immigration, there is a high classification of difference among Chinese from Mainland, Taiwan and Hong Kong. Yet, Ngai’s reluctancy to present the common Chinese voice on their experience of immigration during this period limited her to use generalized diction such as the “Chinese” and “Chinese American” (Ngai 210), that falsely classifies all Chinese under one category. Which consequentially, over looked factions within communities that may have played a significant role in shaping a Chinese immigrants decision to whether acculturate or assimilate to their

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