Read the passage below.
"The League is organized to advocate the restriction of immigration, and to arouse public opinion to the necessity of a further exclusion of elements undesirable for citizenship or injurious to our national character. It is not our purpose to advocate the exclusion of any one race or nation as such, but to establish standard tests, physical, mental, and moral, so that the immigrants we do receive may be of a quality to assimilate with our people and sustain our institutions."
— Constitution of the Immigration Restriction League, 1894
Which of the following historical developments during the late nineteenth century best explains the sentiments expressed in the excerpt?
- The shift in the geographic origins of immigrants to Southern and Eastern Europe, who were perceived by nativists as culturally distinct and difficult to assimilate.Cevap
- BThe rise of the Populist Party, which successfully pressured Congress to pass a total ban on European immigration to protect agrarian interests.
- CThe federal government's direct financial subsidization of transatlantic passenger lines to increase the urban industrial workforce.
- DThe passage of the Dawes Severalty Act, which sought to relocate newly arrived European immigrants onto agricultural lands in the West.
Cevap
The shift in the geographic origins of immigrants to Southern and Eastern Europe, who were perceived by nativists as culturally distinct and difficult to assimilate.
The correct answer is correct because the late nineteenth century saw a transition from 'Old Immigration' (primarily from Northern and Western Europe) to 'New Immigration' (from Southern and Eastern Europe). These new immigrants were often Catholic or Jewish, spoke different languages, and settled in urban enclaves, which fueled nativist anxieties and led to the formation of groups like the Immigration Restriction League.
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Anahtar Kavram
Immigration, Urbanization, and Social Culture