Saturday, December 6, 2014
Immigration
This week in class I saw an interesting comparison. In American Literature we see in The Great Gatsby an amazing and extravagant life in New York, full of parties and money. However in American Studies we talked about immigration at the turn of the century, we talked about sweatshops and the tenements and the lower class right off the boat. Of course these two situations are twenty years away from each other, but the did coincide. More often than not I find myself thinking of New York in the 1920s, and even now, as the romanticism that is Gatsby's New York (at least in the beginning of the book), and not the horror that was and is still tormenting the lower class. This is even more strange to me because that is what I come from, Southeastern European Jewish immigrants who came through New York, worked in sweatshops, lived in the tenements and then the projects before they got out and moved south and west. What's even weirder is that I want to go back, and so do my cousins, we all want to go back to college there, where our parents and grandparents grew up. I think that means all these immigrants established a community. They did something important. Because now we can go back and be accepted and feel at home and intertwined with our history. But I can't help but wonder if it is fair that, after all the work our previous generations did to get out of there, we would go back and undo some of their hard work. No one from previous generations of my family live there anymore, just my generation. And their parents don't like to visit. But maybe it is a testament to them that we can live in Manhattan, we can get a good education and a good job, and we can make a living. That we can make it in such a place.
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I never actually took into account how differently the points in time, while 20 years apart, were talked about from such different angles. I find it interesting that you point that out because I myself did not notice it or think much of it. I also find your ideas interesting and how you made a connection to your family.
ReplyDeleteDear Zoe, I think that what you are saying about your parents and that they do not like going back to New York and all these memories that they might have been told from their parents is very true. In that they want you to get a better education, because that was the train of thought for a lot of the immigrants that maybe they could have their grandchildren go to good schools. So i think that, that was what they must of thought about all the time whilst working in these sweat shops.
ReplyDeleteI thought the connection you made to your family was very interesting, because I never thought about the affects of immigration to people now, almost 100 years later.
ReplyDeleteZoe, thanks for sharing a bit of yourself and your family here!
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