About the Book

Contents


Acknowledgements to the First Edition
Acknowledgements to the Second Edition

Preface to the First Edition
Preface to the Second Edition

1. Immigration, Race, Ethnicity, Colonialism

Beyond Ellis Island—How Not to Think about Immigration History
Not Assimilation but Race Making
The Immigrant Assimilation Model
The Transnational Diasporic Model
The Panethnic Formation Model
Race vs. Ethnicity: The Difference, and the Difference It Makes
Ethnic Formation Processes
Colonialism and Race Making
Words Matter
Some Terms the Reader May Want to Think about Differently
An Idea that May be New
Notes

2. Colliding Peoples in Eastern North America, 1600-1780

What Do We Celebrate?
In the Beginning There Were Indians
 Diversity
Origins
There Goes the Neighborhood: European Incursion and “Settlement”
Spanish, French, and Dutch Encounter Native Peoples
English Immigrants Encounter Native Peoples
Resistance, Conflict, Genocide
A Mixed Multitude: European Migrants
English Immigrants
Immigration Policy under the British
Other Europeans
Indenture
From English to American
Out of Africa
To Become a Slave
Dimensions and Effects
How “Black” and “Slave” Came to Mean the Same Thing
Variations on a Theme
From Igbo and Bambara to Negro
Merging Peoples, Blending Cultures
The End of an Age
Identity: Black, White, and Red
Assimilation
Notes

3. An Anglo-American Republic?  Racial Citizenship, 1760-1860

Slavery and Anti-Slavery in the Era of the American Revolution
Thinking about Freedom, and Not
Three-fifths of a Person
Partly-Free People of Color and One Drop of Blood
Africans and Indians
Free White Persons: Defining Membership  
         Playing Indian: White Appropriations of Native American Symbols and Identities  
European Immigrants
Beginnings of US Immigration Policy
Immigration, but Not “Old” or “New”
British
Germans
Peasants Into City People: The Famine Irish
Sephardim and German Jews
Issues in European Migration
Individual Choice or Embedded in a Web of Industrial Capital?
Recruitment and Chain Migration
Changes in Transportation Technology and Travel Conditions
Nativism
Were the Irish Ever Not White?
Making a White Race
Notes

4. The Border Crossed Us—Euro-Americans Take the Continent, 1830-1900

US Colonial Expansion Across North America
Making Empire, Making Race: Manifest Destiny and Westward Expansion
Indian Deportation to the West
Resistance and Genocide
The Remnant: Reservation Indians
Disappearing Peoples
Native American Panethnic Formation
Taking the Mexican Northlands
Forget the Alamo: Taking Texas for Slavery
Expanding Aggression
Incorporating Mexico’s People, and Not
Making Race in California
Racial Replacement
East from Asia
Chinese Immigrants
The Anti-Chinese  Movement
Slave and Citizen
Colonialism and Race Making
Notes

5. The Great Wave, 1870-1930

From New Sources and Old, to America and Back
Still Coming from Northwest Europe
New Sources of Workers in Southern Europe
From Eastern Europe, Too
Northeast Europeans
Making a Multiethnic Working Class in the West
Chinese
Japanese
Mexicans
Filipinos and Other Asians
Expunging Native Peoples
Interlocking Discriminations
Notes

6. Cementing Hierarchy:  Issues and Interpretations, 1870-1930

    
How They Lived and Worked
The Immigrant Working Class
Not All Were Working Class
eading the Poor
Gender and migration
Angles of Entry
Making Jim Crow in the South
Making Racial and Ethnic Hierarchy in the North
Whiteness of Several Colors
Beginnings of Black Migration
Empire and Race-Making
Making War on Our Little Brown Brothers
Queen Lili`uokalani Loses Her Country
Law, Race, and Immigration
Race and Gender Before the Law
Legal Whiteness
Racialist Pseudoscience and Its Offspring 
Pseudoscience Becomes Popular Knowledge
Perfecting Humans
Anti-Immigrant Movements
The Anti-Japanese Movement
The Americanization Campaign
The Campaign for Immigration Restriction
Interpretive Issues
Orientalism
Ethnicity on Display: Ethnic Festivals, World’s Fairs, and Human Zoos
Racializing Religion: Jews as White and Not
Notes

7. White People’s America, 1924-1965

Recruiting citizens
Second Generations and Third
Recruiting Guest Workers
Mexicans
Filipinos and Puerto Ricans
Indians or Citizens?
World War II
Rooting Out the Zoot
Neither an Accident, Nor a Mistake
European Refugees and Displaced Persons
Cracks in White Hegemony
The Cold War:  Competing for the World’s Peoples
The Black Freedom Movement
Racial Fairness and the Immigration Act of 1965
Notes

8. New Migrants from New Places, Since 1965

Some Migrants We Know
From Asia
Fleeing War in Vietnam and Mainland Southeast Asia
Draining Brains from the Philippines
From Korea
From South Asia
From China
A Model Minority?
From the Americas
Perhaps a Model Minority: Migrants from Mexico
Migrants or Exiles? From Cuba
From Other Parts of Latin America and the Caribbean
From Europe
From Africa
Continuing Involvements Abroad
Notes

9. Redefining Membership amid Multiplicity, Since 1965

Immigration Reform, Again and Again
Panethnic Power
The Chicana and Chicano Movement
The Asian American Panethnic Movement
Native American Political and Cultural Resurgence
African Americans After Civil Rights to President Barack Obama
Disgruntled White People
Not the KKK: White Ethnic Movements
Immigrant Bashing
Fighting Affirmative Action
New Issues in a New Era
Changes in Racial Etiquette
Multiculturalism
The Multiracial Movement
Forever Foreigners: Asians and Arabs
September 11, 2001, and the Racialization of Middle Eastern Americans
National Security and Borders
Notes

10. The Return of White Supremacy?

Hate in the Time of COVID
Triumph of the New Nativism
Epoch of Hate: Nativism, the Alt-Right, Antisemitism, Islamophobia
Racist and Anti-Immigrant Policies During the Trump Presidency
Racism and Etiquette
Immigrants
By the Numbers: Not Enough Immigrants
The Rise and Fall of Mexican Migration
Central Americans
Islamophobia
Militarizing the Border
People Without Papers
Refugees and Asylum
Babies in Cages
Political Swings and Resistance
Notes

11. Epilogue

Projecting the Future 
Some Issues to Consider As We Look Ahead
What Do Immigrants Cost?
How Shall We Deal with Inequalities that Have Been Shaped by Generations?
Who Is an American?
Reprise
Hope for the Future?
Notes

Appendix A

About the Authors


The first edition of Almost All Aliens was written by Paul Spickard, published in 2007. Francisco Beltrán and Laura Hooton joined as co-authors for the second edition, published in 2022. Carolina Jones Ortiz created the original artwork for the cover of the second edition and the website banner. The website for the first edition was crafted by Ingrid Dineen-Wimberly. Laura Hooton did the bulk of the work in fashioning this edition’s more expansive website.

Paul Spickard

Paul Spickard is Distinguished Professor of History and Affiliate Professor of Asian American Studies, Black Studies, Chicana/o Studies, East Asian Studies, Middle Eastern Studies, and Religious Studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara.  He has held positions at 20 universities and institutes in the United States and abroad.  He has written or edited 24 books and over 100 articles on race, migration, identity, and related topics, including: Shape Shifters: Journeys Across Terrains of Race and Identity (2019); Red and Yellow, Black and Brown: Decentering Whiteness in Mixed Race Studies (2017); Race in Mind (2015); Global Mixed Race (2014); Almost All Aliens: Immigration, Race and Colonialism in American History and Identity (2007, 2022); Race and Nation: Ethnic Systems in the Modern World (2005); Racial Thinking in the United States (2004); Japanese Americans (1996, 2009); and Mixed Blood: Intermarriage and Ethnic Identity in 20th-Century America (1989).  His current project is Race Changes.

Paul Spickard

Francisco Beltrán

Francisco Beltrán is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Oklahoma State University. He is a US historian who specializes in Chicana/o/x and Latina/o/x history, race and ethnicity, immigration, and borderlands. He is currently working on a manuscript that examines the Mexican American Community Press of San Diego, California during the 1960s and 1970s. Dr. Beltrán completed his PhD at UC Santa Barbara in 2019. He has previously taught at UC Santa Barbara, San Francisco State University, and the University of Michigan.

Francisco Beltrán

Laura Hooton

Laura Hooton is Assistant Professor of History at Angelo State University. Previously, she taught at the United States Military Academy at West Point, where she founded the Black History Project (https://www.westpoint.edu/academics/academic-departments/history/black-history-main). She works at the intersection of African American history, borderlands history, and Black and ethnic studies. She is interested in race, ethnicity, identity, and citizenship, especially in the context of African American history, Latinx history, and comparative race and ethnicity in the American West and U.S.-Mexico borderlands, social movements, the North American borderlands, and migration and immigration. Her first monograph, under contract with University of Oklahoma Press, focuses on Little Liberia, an African American agricultural community in Baja California in the early twentieth century, as well as its larger place in United States, Mexico, and Baja California History, Black studies, and social movements. Her work on Little Liberia appears in Farming Across Borders: A Transnational History of the North American West and California History (2017). She received her Ph.D. in history with an interdisciplinary emphasis in Black studies from UC Santa Barbara in 2018.

Laura Hooton

Carolina Jones Ortiz – Artist

Carolina Jones Ortiz likes her name to be pronounced in Spanish ​​(Cah-roh-lee-nah), even though her father picked her a name that could easily be translated into English. She also refuses to erase “Ortiz” from her surname even though all her official US documents did.

Carolina Jones Ortiz is a stubborn Mexican-American artist that likes to draw all the things that make life uncomfortable and complicated. Never straying far from her roots, Carolina makes comics about her experience growing up on both sides of the US-Mexico border. Similarly, her illustration work aims to depict the many nuances of the immigrant experience.

Carolina Jones Ortiz

Reviews


Placing race at the center of his story, Spickard offers an important corrective to dominant immigrant narratives about European huddled masses and bountiful golden doors. As immigration debates rage, Almost All Aliens provides vital historical perspective.

— Thomas A. Guglielmo, Associate Professor and Chair of American Studies at GWU

Almost All Aliens is simply stunning. Spickard powerfully connects the study of immigration to the histories of race, slavery, and the displacement of Native peoples. In doing so, he revises both immigration history and American history

— Erika Lee, author of At America's Gates: Chinese Immigration During the Exclusion Era, 1882-1943 and The Making of Asian America or America for Americans.

With Almost All Aliens Paul Spickard again demonstrates that he is one of our most skillful and innovative interpreters of race and ethnicity in American life. He challenges most of the assumptions made about the topic since Crèvecoeur asked his fateful question and provides an exciting analytic narrative of our immigrant past.

— Roger Daniels, Charles Phelps Taft Professor Emeritus of History, University of Cincinnati

Almost All Aliens is a stunning achievement! By combining the insights of the massive recent literature on immigration, race, and colonialism, Paul Spickard has produced a masterful new narrative of U.S. immigration history for the 21st century. Immensely readable and thoroughly provocative, it will delight students and scholars of immigration alike.

— George J. Sanchez, University of Southern California, author of Becoming Mexican American and Boyle Heights

With this book, Paul Spickard has produced the best single-volume study of American immigration history available today.

— K. Scott Wong, Williams College