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Speaking American Zevi Gutfreund

Speaking American By Zevi Gutfreund

Speaking American by Zevi Gutfreund


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Summary

When Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Bilingual Education Act of 1968, language learning became a touchstone in the emerging culture wars. Nowhere was this more apparent than in Los Angeles. The city is the ideal locus for Zevi Gutfreund's study of how language instruction informed the social construction of American citizenship.

Speaking American Summary

Speaking American: Language Education and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles by Zevi Gutfreund

When Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Bilingual Education Act of 1968, language learning became a touchstone in the emerging culture wars. Nowhere was this more apparent than in Los Angeles, where elected officials from both political parties had supported the legislation, and where the most disruptive protests over it occurred. The city, with its diverse population of Latinos and Asian Americans, is the ideal locus for Zevi Gutfreund's study of how language instruction informed the social construction of American citizenship. Combining the history of language instruction, school desegregation, and civil rights activism as it unfolded in Japanese American and Mexican American communities in L.A., this timely book clarifies the critical and evolving role of language instruction in twentieth-century American politics.

Speaking American reveals how, for generations, language instruction offered a forum for Angelino educators to articulate their responses to policies that racialized access to citizenship - from the national origins immigration quotas of the Progressive Era through Congress's removal of race from these quotas in 1965. Meanwhile, immigrant communities designed language experiments to counter efforts to limit their liberties. Gutfreund's book is the first to place the experiences of Mexican Americans and Japanese Americans side by side as they navigated debates over Americanization programs, intercultural education, school desegregation, and bilingual education. In the process, the book shows, these language experiments helped Angelino immigrants introduce competing concepts of citizenship that were tied to their actions and deeds rather than to the English language itself.

Complicating the usual top-down approach to the history of racial politics in education, Speaking American recognizes the ways in which immigrant and ethnic activists, as well as white progressives and conservatives, have been deeply invested in controlling public and private aspects of language instruction in Los Angeles. The book brings compelling analytic depth and breadth to its examination of the social and political landscape in a city still at the epicenter of American immigration politics.

Speaking American Reviews

In this illuminating historical account, Zevi Gutfreund posits that formal language education served as a vector through which Angelinos - those who possessed social capital and those who aspired to it - sought to articulate and shape notions of US citizenship in the twentieth century. Gutfreund uncovers the ways teachers, parents, and students challenged Americanization and English-only campaigns and brought to bear their own aspirations for national belonging. Speaking American proves quite salient and timely as California continues to both reify and undermine national xenophobic currents in American immigration politics. - Clif Stratton, author of Education for Empire: American Schools, Race, and the Paths of Good Citizenship|Speaking American asks critical questions about identity, Americanization, education, and young people. In telling this complex and important story - difficult, disappointing, and uplifting at the various twists and turns of Los Angeles history - Zevi Gutfreund explores how and why L.A. was at the epicenter of twentieth-century Americanization debates and struggles. He renders the always-complex social and racial arenas of metropolitan L.A. with clarity and scholarly acuity. - William Deverell, author of Whitewashed Adobe: The Rise of Los Angeles and the Remaking of Its Mexican Past

About Zevi Gutfreund

Zevi Gutfreund holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Los Angeles, and is Assistant Professor of History at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge.

Additional information

NPB9780806161860
9780806161860
0806161868
Speaking American: Language Education and Citizenship in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles by Zevi Gutfreund
New
Hardback
University of Oklahoma Press
2019-03-30
308
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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