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On "Groupness'
VIRGINIA YANS
WRITING IN THE PAGES of this journal seven years ago, George J.
Sanchez, the distinguished historian of Mexican Americans, reached an
important conclusion: immigration history had reached an impasse. Renewal
and redemption, he argued, awaited the successful incorporation
of scholarship developed outside the field, the scholarship of "race, nation,
and culture." Sanchez took sides in what sociologists Stephen Cornell and
Douglas Hartmann later described as the "race or ethnicity?" debates.
Framing these debates in methodological terms, Sanchez argued that the
continuing use of assimilation paradigms suited to European immigrant
experiences created a kind of analytic paralysis: assimilation paradigms
do not account for persistent racial differences; they avoid the master
American narrative of "white supremacy."
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