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Forum: Future Directions in American Immigration and Ethnic History
Introduction
JOHN J. BUKOWCZYK
SCHOLARLY INTEREST in the
history of immigration, race, and ethnicity has never been higher than
at present, and these subjects also have come to occupy a central place
in both policy discourse and popular culture. Significantly, the field
of American and ethnic history has expanded far beyond the dualistic assimilation/ethnicity
paradigm to encompass a dizzying range of subjects and topics, including
forced migrations, the relationship of colonialism and imperialism to
migration, diasporas and transnationalism, the structural determinants
of the migration and incorporation of immigrants, the development of migration
systems, the social construction of race and nation, multiculturalism,
and a host of other problems and topics. Arguably, the immigration and
ethnic history field, as it has evolved, now ranks among the most overarching
and encompassing of the various fields of historical inquiry. Indeed,
it may provide a route toward the kind of historical synthesis widely
bemoaned by scholars as lacking since the rise of the various revisionist
scholarly sub-fields—like the "new social history," radical history,
women's history, gay and lesbian history, ethnohistory. Latino/a Studies,
Asian American Studies, cultural studies, Black history, and immigration
and ethnic history itself—shattered the hegemonic master narrative
that had dominated the historical discipline through the 1950s.
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