Since the beginning of race and ethnicity, race, gender and class has always been an important factor for those who experience in America. In the history of the Americans, race, gender difference, meaning of class separation changed. For many Americans, their perception of class and race, and how much sex affects people's lives often depends on their race, gender, and class. The reality of the United States, the reality of the United States in the media, and the recognized reality of the United States are different.
American race and ethnic Columbus sailed Ocean Blue in 1492. Everyone knows the story of Christopher Columbus; otherwise they enter elementary school. When he incorrectly landed in the United States, he did not know he would produce the world's largest dissolution pot. This "crucible" combines multiple cultures and beliefs to provide a means for a new country to create a new country with a new and constantly changing culture. - After the end of the civil war, slavery was abolished, but the race of the black still was not accepted equally as an American society. In order to better understand the events and struggles faced during this period, we must examine those documents.
America is a crucible of a mixture of race, nation and culture. Nevertheless, the first generation Americans found themselves at the intersection of accepting "Americans" - eliminating some ethnic and cultural connections, making their ancestral culture We keep in touch. I never felt such a conflict before I was 13 or 14. To be Indian is as natural and important as an American. There is no struggle; I am proud of two aspects of my identity. The situation changed when I was a high school student. I looked at the color, paid attention to the names of "strange" and "citizen", and started to compare myself with my colleagues. I am from a diverse city with a large population of South Asia, but still I feel strange. For people of color it feels difficult in the traditional "white" American home. But why is the US always white in my head?
Eastern Jewish immigrants from the late nineteenth century to the early twentieth century, as many as Steve Steinberg records in his book "Ethnic Myth: Race, Ethnicity, Class", with many non-Jewish Europeans It is likely to be a different skilled worker. Between 1899 and 1910 their homeland, 49% of British immigrants, 30% of immigrants in the UK, while two-thirds of Jewish immigrants were skilled labor in manufacturing or commercial, or some kind of craftsman There was only%. German, 15% of South Italians, 13% of Irish immigrants, 6% of Poles