《移民的超级力量:大脑、肌肉和勇气如何让美国更强大》,作者:蒂姆·凯恩

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
A. Kraut
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1951年,汉德林以移民在美国历史中的作用为中心,开始了他获得普利策奖的著作《扎根》:“有一次我想写一部美国移民史。然后我发现移民就是美国历史。”凯恩现在在《移民超级大国》中提出了同样大胆的主张,认为美国过去和现在的伟大和繁荣是移民的产物,而不是任何其他因素的产物。在选择凯恩这本书的副标题时,考虑的远不止头韵。在凯恩看来,新来者的“肌肉”从他们的劳动中获得了经济红利。他们的“勇敢”转化为爱国主义,为美国的军事力量和安全做出了贡献,他们的“头脑”推动了创新,使美国成为每个渴望世界领导地位的国家的榜样。凯恩的书是一部历史,但也是一部毫不掩饰的宣传作品。在政治上保守的凯恩毫不犹豫地批评包括唐纳德·特朗普在内的共和党人,他们推动对移民采取限制性做法。凯恩认为,移民是维护这个国家在世界秩序中主导地位的重要因素。他将移民视为“美国身份的核心”和“力量倍增器”,这对今天使美国成为“一个占主导地位的超级大国”的大战略至关重要,有能力抵御“技术激增的中国”等外国威胁(7,10)。尽管凯恩的证据充满了丰富多彩的轶事,但其依据是对经济数据的精心构建的定量分析。出现的是一幅移民如何以“人口活力”丰富美国的画像,表现在他们的体力和活力、他们在军队中爱国报国的承诺,以及在科学和医学领域获得的著名奖项(11)。凯恩表示,移民宣传也被证明是美国总统政治成功的关键。他将华盛顿、林肯、威尔逊、肯尼迪、约翰逊、里根和乔治·W·布什总统视为成功的总统,因为他们主张向外国出生的人敞开美国的大门,同时拒绝本土主义者的批评。富兰克林·D·罗斯福的总统任期显然不是凯恩的最爱。凯恩让读者想起罗斯福总统“可耻地拒绝逃离纳粹迫害的犹太难民”(66)。相比之下,他赞扬杜鲁门总统“鼓励国家‘履行我们对这些各种信仰的受苦受难和无家可归的难民的责任’”(90)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Immigrant Superpower: How Brains, Brawn, and Bravery Make America Stronger by Tim Kane
In 1951, Handlin began his Pulitzer Prize-winning volume, The Uprooted, by centering the role of immigration in the history of the United States: “Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America. Then I discovered that the immigrants were American history.” Kane now makes an equally bold claim in The Immigrant Superpower, contending that the greatness and prosperity characterizing the American past and present are the products of immigration more than of any other factors. The subtitle of Kane’s volume was chosen with far more than alliteration in mind. In Kane’s view, newcomers’ “brawn” yielded economic dividends derived from their labor. Their “bravery” translated into patriotism and contributed to the military strength and security of the United States, and their “brains” fueled the innovation that has made the United States a model for every nation aspiring to world leadership. Kane’s book is a history but also unabashedly a work of advocacy. Conservative politically, Kane does not hesitate to criticize those Republicans, including Donald Trump, who push for a restrictive approach to immigration. Kane views immigration as an essential ingredient in preserving this country’s dominant place in the world order. He views immigration as both “central to American identity” and a “force multiplier,” essential to the grand strategy that today makes the United States “a dominant superpower,” capable of fending off foreign threats such as a “technologically surging China” (7, 10). Although seasoned with colorful anecdotes, Kane’s evidence is grounded in a carefully constructed quantitative analysis of economic data. What emerges is a portrait of how immigrants have enriched the United States with a “demographic vibrancy” expressed in their physical strength and vitality, their commitment to serving their country patriotically in the military, and the brainpower they contributed to their adopted home, evidenced by the number of patents acquired, companies started, and prestigious awards won in science and medicine (11). According to Kane, immigration advocacy has also proven to be the key to political success for American presidents. He counts Presidents Washington, Lincoln, Wilson, Kennedy, Johnson, Reagan, and George W. Bush as successful presidents because they advocated opening America’s doors to the foreign-born, while rejecting the criticisms of nativists. Franklin D. Roosevelt’s presidency is clearly not among Kane’s favorites. Kane reminds readers of President Roosevelt’s “shameful turning away of Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecution” (66). In contrast, he praises President Truman who “encouraged the country to ‘fulfill our responsibilities to these suffering and homeless refugees of all faiths’” (90).
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
20.00%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: The Journal of Interdisciplinary History features substantive articles, research notes, review essays, and book reviews relating historical research and work in applied fields-such as economics and demographics. Spanning all geographical areas and periods of history, topics include: - social history - demographic history - psychohistory - political history - family history - economic history - cultural history - technological history
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