Episode 93: 100 Years of U.S. Media Fueling Anti-Immigrant Sentiment

Published: Nov. 13, 2019, 4:53 p.m.

"A preponderance of foreign elements destroys the most precious thing [a nation] possesses - its own soul,\u201d wrote the politically-influential Immigration Restriction League in early 1919. "The great hotbeds of radicalism lie in the various colonies of alien workmen," declared The New York Times on January 5, 1921. Warning of the "menace" posed by "millions of intending immigrants of the poorest and most refractory sort," The Saturday Evening Post insisted days later that "the character of those who have been coming to us from overseas has unmistakably deteriorated."

While anti-Chinese and anti-Asian laws had been on the books for decades, the passing of the Immigration Act in October 1918\u2013\u2013and later the Immigration Act of 1924\u2013the United States ushered in a new era of racist, anti-left, anti-immigrant sentiment.

By the early 1950s, new laws upheld a racist ranking system for \u201cdesirable\u201d ethnic groups, making it easier for the U.S. to deport people suspected of being Communists, anarchists and other radicals. All of which happened in parallel with the rise of major media tropes of immigration reporting; tropes that\u2013\u2013with varying degrees of subtlety\u2013\u2013still exist today.

On this episode - recorded live at Cornell University's Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art in Ithaca, New York on October 25, 2019 - we highlight a number of these tropes, including the media's rampant association of immigrants with criminality and terrorism, deserving refugees vs. undeserving migrants; frequent references to immigrants as invading hordes or vermin infestations; appeals to allegedly race-neutral \u201claw and order\u201d sentiment; and today's right-wing open border panic.

We are joined by Cornell professor Shannon Gleeson.