
Fri 9/9/2011
Italian Americans: Ethnicity and
Assimilation ; Parenti vs Alba
Historian Michael
Parenti strongly believes people will continue to retain ethnic attachments
,not only because their group is under assault, but because the attachment
provides a nurturing social and cultural experience, an opinion that differed
markedly from Professor Alba's view in 1985 that Ethnicity would fade into
the twilight.
Thanks to Frank DeSantis
American Identity: To Be or Not To
Be
NaBy Michael Parenti, 2009
New Look at my 1967 Article
about Ethnicity and Assimilation, in the American Political Science
Review
In the 1950s and early 1960s, it
was the accepted view among many social scientists that, as ethnic assimilation
advanced, ethnic group identities would fade away. But in fact, ethnicity
continued to impact significantly upon political life. Why was that?
Acculturation and Assimilation
In 1967, I published an article in
the American Political Science Review arguing that assimilation would not
wipe out ethnic politics and ethnic identities in the foreseeable future
because assimilation was not happening.
I suggested that we needed to distinguish
between culture and social systems. A culture is a system of beliefs, values,
images, lifestyles, and customary practices including language, law, arts,
and the like. A social system consists of the structured relations and
associations among individuals and groups both formal and informal: family,
church, school, workplace, and other networks of roles and status. The
culture is mediated through the social system or social structure, as it
is sometimes called.
To become well practiced to a prevailing
culture is to acculturate. To become absorbed into the dominant social
structure is to assimilate. Since the beginning of the American nation
the Anglo Protestant nativist population has wanted minority ethnic groups
to acculturate but not necessarily assimilate. The "late-migration" Southern
and Eastern Europeans were expected to discard their alien customs and
appearances offensive to American sensibilities. A new verb was invented:
they had to "Americanize."
To make matters worse, these immigrants
of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries settled mostly in
the large urban centers of the Northeast and Midwest (where the jobs were),
places that small town Protestant America already loathed as squalid and
decadent hellholes.
The public schools became special
agencies of acculturation to be imposed on the immigrant children. As a
child in a classroom full of Italian-American grade-schoolers in New York
City, I was treated to patriotic tales about George Washington, Nathan
Hale, Paul Revere, and other of our "heroic founders." We recited the Pledge
of Allegiance and sang the "Star-Spangled Banner" and "America the Beautiful."
And I recall at least one of my teachers telling us in an annoyed tone:
"Tell your parents to speak English at home."
By the second-generation (children
of the immigrants), the ethnics already had undergone a substantial degree
of acculturation in language, dress, recreation, entertainment tastes,
and other lifestyle practices and customs, while interest in old world
culture became minimal if not nonexistent.
However, such acculturation was most
often not followed by social assimilation. The group became Americanized
in much of its cultural practices, but this says little about its social
relations with the host society. In the face of widespread acculturation,
ethnic minorities still maintained social group relations composed mostly
of fellow ethnics.
The pressure to acculturate was not
accompanied by any invitation to assimilate into Anglo Protestant primary
group relations within the dominant social structure. It seems the nativist
bigots well understood the distinction between acculturation and assimilation,
even if they never actually used such terms. In a word, "You must Americanize
but not in my social circle."
Dual Identities and Group "Traumas"
Many of the crucial images that a
marginalized ethnic group has of itself do not come from itself but from
the dominant culture and dominant social order. For us Italians, the immigrant
generation was reduced to a Luigi caricature, a simple soul who spoke in
a pasta-ladened accent. Then came the perennial Mafia mobster, recently
given new life with The Sopranos. Also still going strong are the television
commercials portraying large boisterous Italian families gathered around
the dinner table to shovel immense amounts of food into their mouths and
at each other in what resembles an athletic contest.
Another enduring stereotype is of
the Italian American as a working-class boor, a dimwit proletarian, visceral,
violent, and thoroughly unschooled. There is nothing wrong with being working-class
but there is plenty wrong with a vulgar class caricature that defames all
working people (whatever their ethnic antecedents). Left out of such scripts
are the realities and struggles of workers, a subject seldom treated in
the mainstream news or entertainment media.
Media stereotypes aside, there exists
a duality in the Italian- American self-identity: on the one hand, a strong
in-group pride regarding our heritage and an assertion of our worth as
Italians to counteract the wretched stereotypes, along with strong family
involvements that remain ethnically tinged, to say the least.
On the other hand, there are the strenuous
assertions of our "100 percent Americanism" as a way of overcoming social
marginalization. This is what I have called cultural ambidexterity, the
promotion of both ethnic pride and Americanism all at the same time, usually
accompanied by a political conservatism.
It is an image duality that fits into
the acculturation/assimilation model: we acculturate to the American identity,
often with a compensatory militancy because of our being somewhat marginalized
and unassimilated. This marginalization at the same time adds to our determination
to hold to an Italian group awareness and loyalty.
There are ethnic groups that have
sustained enormous historic trauma, leaving them with an enduring mega-narrative.
For them, ethnic identity is an especially strong imperative. A few prominent
examples:
African Americans who have braved
centuries of slavery, plus a century of segregation and lynch-mob rule,
and today the persistent poisonous sting of White racism.
Jewish Americans who have been victimized
by two thousand years of Christianist inspired anti-Semitism and violence
capped by the historic trauma of the Holocaust.
Latino-Americans and Asian Americans
who would be much further along the assimilation track having been fairly
early arrivals, but whose ranks have been lately infused with millions
of newcomers, thereby raising fresh issues of acculturation, economic hardship,
and even residential legality, all of which heightens a defensive awareness
of group identity. In the case of Asian-Americans, and to some extent with
Latinos also--there is the additional mark of racism with which to contend.
Arab Americans and Persian Americans
in this country in relatively smaller numbers with less visibility but
who in recent years have been unjustly harassed and stigmatized as being
associated with terrorist groups.
In each of the above examples, group
identity retains a special saliency because it is linked to past or present
issues of discrimination and mistreatment. What I wrote in my 1967 article
still seems to hold: while much ethnic militancy and group boosterism is
considered clannish, it "is really defensive. The greater the animosity,
exclusion, and disadvantage, generally the more will ethnic self-awareness
permeate the individual's feelings and evaluations."
In addition, let it not be forgotten
that people retain ethnic attachments not only because their group is under
assault but because the attachment provides a nurturing social and cultural
experience. So along with the negative-defensive identity we have the positive-enjoyment
ethnic experience. This is as true of Italian-Americans as of any group
in the United States.
The Future Has Arrived
Does assimilation happen to any ethnic
group? Yes indeed. Those northern European Protestants who invaded this
country in what are called the "early migrations" of the seventeenth, eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, riddled as they were with sectarian enmities
and national differences, pretty much blended into the nativist melting
pot by the mid-19th century. Today persons of long settled and much mixed
northern European Protestant lineage are often notably vague about their
antecedents. Their ethnic identity is a matter of no great urgency and
has a low saliency to their self identity.
Some white Protestant immigrants are
relatively recent arrivals yet they have enjoyed a fast-track assimilation,
given their linguistic, physical, religious, and temperamental resemblance
to the Anglo-American Protestant prototype. British workers who migrated
here at about the same time as Italians, Greeks, and Jews were more or
less well assimilated within one generation.
The 1967 article I wrote about ethnic
assimilation--or rather the absence of assimilation- focused on the Southern
and Eastern European groups of the "late migrations" of 1870-1914. I concluded
that ethnic identity would persist and would continue to play a role in
political life well into the distant future. My article relied on data
from the early 1960s but also from the 1940s and 1950s, in other words,
as much as sixty or seventy years ago.
With this passage of time, one might
say that the "distant future" has arrived, at least for the white ethnics:
the Irish, Poles, Italians, Greeks, Portuguese, and others. Today the ethnic
identities of these late migration groups have much less saliency. This
can be seen most dramatically in the political realm where references to
a candidate's ethnicity have become quite rare unless the individual is
African-American, Latino, or Asian.
Recall how John F. Kennedy's Irish
Catholic antecedents were such a touchy issue in the 1963 presidential
contest. But by 2004 it no longer mattered that Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry was a Roman Catholic. And in the 2008 election, it
went largely unmentioned that vice presidential candidate Joe Biden was
Irish Catholic.
In 2006 the media took no notice that
Nancy Pelosi was the first Italian-American Speaker of the House; instead
attention dwelt almost exclusively on the fact that she was the first woman
to occupy that post.
For years Italian-American organizations
had called for an Italian-American appointment to the Supreme Court. By
2006 there were two Italian-Americans on the Supreme Court, Antonin Scalia
and Samuel Alito, both conservatives. Progressive Italian Americans like
myself were not dancing in the streets bursting with pride. If anything,
we opposed both nominations. Obviously the politics of such jurists were
of more significance to us than their ethnic antecedents.
In fact, as far as I could observe,
no one took note that there were two Italians on the High Court except
for the several conservative Italian-American organizations that ran full-page
ads in 2006 designed to misrepresent those who opposed Alito on political
grounds as being opposed to him out of ethnic bias. Thus the ads argued
that Alito was being derisively called "Scalito" (true) because of some
anti-Italian prejudice (untrue). Actually the conflation of names was invited
by their similarity and impelled by the fact that Alito was a right-wing
reactionary twin of Scalia's.
Pre-election opinion polls and exit
polls published in the mainstream press reveal what groups are still in
the public consciousness and what groups have faded into the background.
After the 2008 presidential election, the New York Times devoted an entire
page to how various groups in America voted. The Times broke down the electorate
by income, gender, education level, region, and religion, but no ethnic
groups other than Latinos and African-Americans.
Gone were the old time Harris-poll
and Gallup-poll reports on how Italians, Irish, Poles, Germans, Hungarians,
Portuguese, Greeks, and the like have voted. The white ethnics of the late
migrations seem to have assimilated into the electoral mainstream, at least
as distinct voting groups.
Good-bye Columbus
Those of us who are Italian-Americans
might ask, is assimilation our ultimate fate? And does assimilation mean
disappearance as a distinct ethnic entity? Is it our destiny to be melted
down by the melting pot, going the way of the earlier Anglo-Protestant
groups?
Be aware that social assimilation
also leads to a high degree of biological assimilation, in other words,
intermarriage and interbreeding with increasing numbers of offspring who
are of mixed heritage. This growing tendency toward intermarriage has been
a source of concern among some Jewish organizations that posit the question:
"Will intermarriage succeed in doing what 2000 years of oppression could
not do?" (namely bring about the disappearance of the Jewish people).
For Italian Americans at the present
time ethnic awareness still retains a significant saliency even among those
who attain high levels of education and professional training--as demonstrated
by the rich offering of scholarly papers presented at the yearly meetings
of the American Italian Historical Association.
There is no reason to assume that
a person's identity choices are mutually exclusive rather than multifaceted.
Multiculturalism can obtain not only in society but within individuals.
And individuals of mixed descent can enjoy multiple identities and loyalties.
In addition, as noted earlier, ethnic
identity is not only reactive but proactive, not only a defense against
derogatory stereotypes, not only a compensatory assurance of group worth,
but a positive enjoyment, a celebration of our history and culture in this
country and in Italy. It is a way of connecting with others in what too
often is a friendless and ruthless market society, a nurturing identity
that is larger than the self yet smaller than the nation.
It would do well if we could bring
more of a social content to our ethnic identity. The Italian-American Political
Solidarity Club has just published a book whose title urges as much: Avanti
Popolo: Italian-American Writers Sail Beyond Columbus. The book urges that
on Columbus Day instead of celebrating conquest we should acknowledge those
who fought for the rights of all immigrants and for social justice.
Indeed Italian Americans need to bring
substance to the symbolic politics that have been fed to us. We do not
need another statue to Columbus. Some such as Diane Di Prima, Tommi Avicolli-Mecca,
and Juliet Ucelli have organized "Dumping Columbus" readings and other
events that challenge the iconic image of the Great Navigator and instead
commemorate the Native Americans he enslaved and murdered.
Philip Cannistraro and Gerald Meyer
(of German Protestant lineage) edited a book, The Lost World of Italian-American
Radicalism, that reclaims some of the history of radical Italian-American
immigrants, labor leaders, union organizers, antiwar activists, and political
protesters, a history long neglected or repressed.
To frame the Italian-American experience
within a context of struggle for social justice and economic survival is
to give it a dimension that goes beyond nostalgia and sentimentality, and
flies in the face of the stereotypes that weigh down upon us Italians.
Thus do we not only realize more of ourselves but we connect to more of
the world, especially to the class realities that compose so much of life
yet remain too often unmentioned and unnoticed.
The Twilight of Ethnicity Among American
Catholics of European Ancestry
By Richard D. Alba State University
of New York at Albany; Prentice Hall 1985
ABSTRACT : The Catholic ethnic groups
of European origins are essential to any assessment of ethnicity in the
United States. Their ethnicity is believed widely to remain vigorous many
decades after their immigration. Indeed, by the measure of some important
characteristics, such as rates of college attendance and interethnic marriage,
they seem distinct from American core groups, specifically Protestants
of British ancestry. However, the trends of these characteristics among
the Catholic groups, indicated by differences between birth cohorts, reveal
their growing similarity to the American core. The Catholic groups appear
to be assimilating rapidly, and it is argued that their ethnicity is entering
a twilight stage.
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