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Transnational Social Review
A Social Work Journal
Volume 5, 2015 - Issue 1
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Focus Topic: Borders, Trans-borders, No Borders?: Problematizing the Figure of "the Migrant."

Fencing the other: Symbolic constructions of the “immigrant” within

Pages 7-23 | Published online: 16 Mar 2015
 

Abstract

Symbolic markers of degeneracy have been applied to immigrants in the US since the early 1800s when the practice of alcohol consumption common to newly-arrived German and Irish settlers was purposefully vilified through popular media. The practice of using stigmatizing symbolic markers to construct differential beliefs and treatment of the globally mobile persists today. This paper analyzes historical and contemporary news stories, political speech, campaign adverts, and satirical cartoons containing both visual and textual symbols which helped to produce the hegemony of a discourse that denigrated those cast as “immigrants.” A number of fear-rousing themes are found in contemporary narratives that mirror historical tropes, such as the use of aquatic metaphors to refer to mass migration. It is theorized that such tropes operate as metonyms which conjure a range of negative associations that have material consequences for those seen as “immigrants.” Such collective symbolic denigration also serves a number of roles for the status quo. It creates an oppositional status that through a dialectical process helps co-constitute the “ideal” US national subject. It contributes to a collective obliviousness about the violent and colonial origins of the US as a nation-state. And finally, it reifies the nation-state as a “natural” entity rather than as a political and social construct.

Notes

1. To contradict Dobbs’ claims it must be pointed out that although having a baby while in the United States grants the child citizenship under the 14th Amendment, it results in no change in immigration status for the mother (so to continue with Dobbs’ grotesque metaphor, the baby may be an anchor, but the ship is legally on the other side of the harbor). And to Baier’s claim, while traversing a national border without going through immigration controls can be defined as an illegal act if a person is apprehended, it does not make them as a person illegal.

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