Question

"Is This A White Country, or What?" Lillian Rubin
Lillian Rubin demonstrates the links between economic competition, racial prejudice, and the anti-immigration sentiments expressed by working class whites. Rubin points out that while there is a long history of racial hostility toward immigrant groups in America, the limited employment opportunities and the darker skin tones of recent immigrants have intensified these hostilities. Racism and nativism, according to Rubin, is apparent in Whites' views of recent immigrants and people of color. The visibility of and the demands for recognition expressed by these groups are seen as threats to whites' economic livelihood and their understanding of America. Rubin's interviews with working class Whites illustrate this point, as well as two contradictions evident in Whites' attitudes toward immigrants and people of color: Whites resent the unity of these groups, yet they exclude them from dominant society. Whites criticize members of these groups for their perceived failures as well as their successes. Rubin asserts that Whites have begun to reclaim their ethnic heritage as a way to secure what they see as their hard earned position of privilege in American society.
According to "Is This A White Country, or What?" the visibility of immigrant groups and people of color has:
a. been well-received by most Whites.
b. led Whites to consider their own racial identity.
c. meant an end to racism in the U.S.
d. created unity of all races in the struggle against racism.

Answer

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