
True Faith and Allegiance : Immigration and American Civic Nationalism
by Pickus, Noah-
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | p. ix |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Naturalization and Nationhood in Three Eras | p. 6 |
Citizenship in Theory and Practice | p. 11 |
Immigration, Citizenship, and the Nation's Founding | p. 15 |
Diversity and Nationhood | p. 16 |
Immigration and Citizenship | p. 22 |
"Men Who Can Shake Off Their Attachments to Their Own Country" | p. 25 |
America's Civic Character | p. 29 |
Alienage and Nationalism in the Early Republic | p. 34 |
Partisan and Ideological Divisions | p. 35 |
"The Constitution Was Made for Citizens, Not Aliens" | p. 37 |
The Rights of Aliens, Citizens, and States | p. 42 |
Marshall, Madison, and Moderate Civic Nationalism | p. 47 |
The Free White Clause of 1790 | p. 52 |
Why White? | p. 53 |
"We Have the Wolf by the Ears": Obstacles to Integration | p. 56 |
Emancipation without Citizenship | p. 58 |
Civic Nationalism and the Claims of History | p. 61 |
Americanization and Pluralism in the Progressive Era | p. 64 |
Citizenship and Nativism, 1830-1911 | p. 65 |
Americanization, Progressivism, and John Dewey's International Nationalism | p. 71 |
Randolph Bourne, Jane Addams, and the Practice of Pluralism | p. 76 |
Nationalism in the Progressive Era | p. 85 |
Roosevelt's New Nationalism | p. 86 |
Naturalization and Constitutional Attachment | p. 90 |
Education for Citizenship | p. 96 |
"We Mutually Pledge to Each Our Lives, Our Fortunes, and Our Sacred Honor": Frances Kellor and the National Americanization Committee | p. 100 |
World War I and the Turn to Coercion | p. 107 |
Tightening the Boundaries of Citizenship | p. 108 |
Postwar Americanization and the Specter of Separatism | p. 112 |
The Peril and the Promise of Civic Nationalism | p. 118 |
Immigration and Citizenship at Century's End | p. 124 |
From New Deal Nationalism to Nationality as a Human Right | p. 125 |
"Name One Benefit of Being a Citizen of the United States": Amnesty and the New Naturalization Process | p. 131 |
Alien Rights and Minority Representation | p. 136 |
The Return of the Nation | p. 140 |
A New Civic Nationalism | p. 147 |
Bourneian and Rooseveltian Civic Nationalism | p. 148 |
Alternatives to Civic Nationalism | p. 153 |
The Evasion of Politics and the Madisonian Moment | p. 160 |
Tolerance, Neglect, and Governance by Proposition | p. 164 |
Epilogue | p. 171 |
Immigration and Immigrant Policy | p. 173 |
What Naturalization Can Do | p. 175 |
Beyond Naturalization | p. 178 |
Dual Citizenship and Global Linkages | p. 181 |
Notes | p. 185 |
Index | p. 241 |
Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
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