Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis: Political Nativism in the Antebellum West

Author:   Luke Ritter
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
ISBN:  

9780823289844


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   01 December 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Our Price $303.60 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis: Political Nativism in the Antebellum West


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Luke Ritter
Publisher:   Fordham University Press
Imprint:   Fordham University Press
ISBN:  

9780823289844


ISBN 10:   0823289842
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   01 December 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction | 1 Chapter 1 The Valley of Decision | 9 Chapter 2 Culture War | 31 Chapter 3 The Power of Nativist Rhetoric | 60 Chapter 4 The Order of Know-Nothings and Secret Democracy | 82 Chapter 5 Crime, Poverty, and the Economic Origins of Political Nativism | 105 Chapter 6 From Anti-Catholicism to Church-State Separation | 148 Epilogue The Specter of Anti-Catholicism, New Nativism, and the Ascendancy of Religious Freedom | 174 Notes | 185 Index | 251

Reviews

Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis is a much-needed addition to scholarship on nativism in the United States that concentrates on its manifestations in the Trans-Mississippi West. Ritter illuminates regional distinctions and contexts that historians--myself included--have all too often overlooked in 'flyover' scholarship that implicitly or explicitly claims that nativist expressions in northeastern cities are representative of the movement writ large. By probing unique and regional primary sources, Ritter attends to the broader contexts of increasing immigration, expansionism, and evangelicalism as well as the particular media and strategies employed by nativists to illustrate how their ideologies circulated in the urban midwestern United States. Crucially, by concentrating on those regional distinctions, Ritter is able to give immigrants agency, whether as early settlers of rapidly growing cities and neighborhoods, mobilizers against Sunday laws, or co-creators of a distinct and more inclusive--if also necessarily more generic--civil religion. What's more, in Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis, Ritter illuminates the deep contradictions in nativist strategies and how they drove its adherents to become precisely what they mistakenly feared immigrants inherently were: insular, anti-democratic, and violent. Last, this text is a trenchant reminder that current global and national ideologies are as much as--if not more than--trope as trend. Students and scholars in American history, religion, and political science (to name just a few) will find Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis a necessary and key addition to their library.---Katie Oxx, St. Joseph's University, Luke Ritter provokes his readers to consider the surprising origins of our modern-day understanding of church-state separation, rightly seen by many as essential to 'diversity, ' 'inclusion, ' and 'tolerance, ' in the sometimes rabid intolerance of the nativist movement in antebellum America. To do this, he invites scholars who have focused primarily on nativism in the Northeast (and only recently in the South) to turn their eyes west. It was in the West, he tells us, that rank religious bigotry was transformed into a higher ideal that is used by advocates on both the left and the right to defend religious freedom today.---Maura Jane Farrelly, author of Anti-Catholicism in America, 1620-1860, Luke Ritter's Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis couldn't be more topical. Just in time for the Capitol Insurrection of 2021, Ritter's book unearths events like the Cincinnati Election Day Riot and Chicago Lager Riot of 1855, both triggered by the fear that illegal undocumented voters would seize power from the rightful constituents of the American republic. The MAGA hordes of the Trump years find their parallel in the Know-Nothings, the secretive, conspiracy-fueled brotherhood that channeled wide popular support into electoral success as the American Party... Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis is a fascinating, readable, fact-packed exploration of motifs in American culture that show no signs of going away. It may not explain why the animosities of the 2020s persist, but Ritter definitely shows that they are no new thing.---Timothy Morris, University of Texas at Austin,


Luke Ritter provokes his readers to consider the surprising origins of our modern-day understanding of Church-State separation, rightly seen by many as essential to diversity, inclusion, and tolerance, in the sometimes rabid intolerance of the nativist movement in antebellum America. To do this, he invites scholars who have focused primarily on nativism in the Northeast (and only recently in the South) to turn their eyes west. It was in the West, he tells us, that rank religious bigotry was transformed into a higher ideal that is used by advocates on both the Left and the Right to defend religious freedom today. -- Maura Jane Farrelly, author of Anti-Catholicism in America, 1620-1860


Luke Ritter provokes his readers to consider the surprising origins of our modern-day understanding of church-state separation, rightly seen by many as essential to 'diversity,' 'inclusion,' and 'tolerance,' in the sometimes rabid intolerance of the nativist movement in antebellum America. To do this, he invites scholars who have focused primarily on nativism in the Northeast (and only recently in the South) to turn their eyes west. It was in the West, he tells us, that rank religious bigotry was transformed into a higher ideal that is used by advocates on both the left and the right to defend religious freedom today. -- Maura Jane Farrelly, author of Anti-Catholicism in America, 1620-1860 Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis is a much-needed addition to scholarship on nativism in the United States that concentrates on its manifestations in the Trans-Mississippi West. Ritter illuminates regional distinctions and contexts that historians-myself included-have all too often overlooked in 'flyover' scholarship that implicitly or explicitly claims that nativist expressions in northeastern cities are representative of the movement writ large. By probing unique and regional primary sources, Ritter attends to the broader contexts of increasing immigration, expansionism, and evangelicalism as well as the particular media and strategies employed by nativists to illustrate how their ideologies circulated in the urban midwestern United States. Crucially, by concentrating on those regional distinctions, Ritter is able to give immigrants agency, whether as early settlers of rapidly growing cities and neighborhoods, mobilizers against Sunday laws, or co-creators of a distinct and more inclusive-if also necessarily more generic-civil religion. What's more, in Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis, Ritter illuminates the deep contradictions in nativist strategies and how they drove its adherents to become precisely what they mistakenly feared immigrants inherently were: insular, anti-democratic, and violent. Last, this text is a trenchant reminder that current global and national ideologies are as much as-if not more than-trope as trend. Students and scholars in American history, religion, and political science (to name just a few) will find Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis a necessary and key addition to their library. -- Katie Oxx, St. Joseph's University Luke Ritter's Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis couldn't be more topical. Just in time for the Capitol Insurrection of 2021, Ritter's book unearths events like the Cincinnati Election Day Riot and Chicago Lager Riot of 1855, both triggered by the fear that illegal undocumented voters would seize power from the rightful constituents of the American republic. The MAGA hordes of the Trump years find their parallel in the Know-Nothings, the secretive, conspiracy-fueled brotherhood that channeled wide popular support into electoral success as the American Party... Inventing America's First Immigration Crisis is a fascinating, readable, fact-packed exploration of motifs in American culture that show no signs of going away. It may not explain why the animosities of the 2020s persist, but Ritter definitely shows that they are no new thing. -- Timothy Morris, University of Texas at Austin


Author Information

Luke Ritter is an assistant professor at New Mexico Highlands University. He received his Ph.D. in American history from Saint Louis University. He specializes in the history of immigration, nativism, and religion in the mid-nineteenth-century United States. Ritter received the William E. Foley Research Fellowship in 2019, the Environment in Missouri History Fellowship in 2016, and the Filson Fellowship in 2013. He is the author of numerous articles published in the Journal of American Ethnic History, American Nineteenth Century History, the Journal of Early American History, and the Missouri Historical Review.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

MRG2025CC

 

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List