Course Syllabus
Race, Religion, and Migration In Global Context
HSTCMP 270 / JEW ST 270
Spring 2022
Tu/Th 10:30 am-12:20 pm
CMU 226
Note: FIRST And Second CLASS ON ZOOM: https://washington.zoom.us/j/94335831453
THIS IS A LIVING DOCUMENT AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE
Professor Devin Naar
Email: denaar@uw.edu
Office hours TBA
Scene from Elia Kazan's America! America! (1963)
“No Asiatic, Negro, or any person born in the Turkish Empire,
nor any lineal descendant of such person, shall be eligible for membership in the Club”
~ By-Laws of the Blue Ridge Club, Seattle, Washington, April 21, 1941.
“Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America. Then I discovered that
the immigrants were American history.”
~ Oscar Handlin, The Uprooted: The Epic story of the Great Migrations that made
the American people, 1952 winner of the Pulitzer Prize in history.
Course Description
Debates about immigration and refugees continue to permeate headlines and social media conversations across the world. From those fleeing the Middle East for Europe and Ukrainians displaced by Russia's invasion, to immigration and asylum as highly contested issues in the United States, people on the move across national boundaries and the impact and meaning of their experiences for societies across the globe remain of utmost significance.
Following the interconnected paths of migration rooted in the eastern Mediterranean region in the 19th and 20th centuries, this course forges a conversation about two major world empires not often considered in dialogue with one another: the Ottoman Empire, which once included much of southeastern Europe, North Africa, and the Middle East; and the United States, consisting both of its continental formation and overseas possessions. The juxtaposition of the Ottoman Empire and the United States will compel us to address the centrality of religion (in the former) and race (in the latter) as organizing principles of society and how both shaped, and were shaped by, each other as well as emerging conceptions of nationality and citizenship. We will also examine how the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire provoked one of the largest population movements in human history that propelled migration to the United States and also contributed to the crystallization of two entities we often take for granted and view as separate: “Europe” and “the Middle East.”
Migrants from the eastern Mediterranean lands of the Ottoman Empire offer a dynamic test case through which to think critically about the formation and transformation of race, nation, religion, culture, and identity in a transcontinental and global context. Especially as the first naturalization act passed by U. S. Congress in 1790 declared that only “white persons” would be eligible to become American citizens, those individuals and communities from the part of the world where Europe ends and the Middle East begins came under intense security and sometimes were rejected as prospective members of the American nation on racial grounds. Their whiteness was often deemed liminal at best, not only in relation to appearance but also in accordance with “race science” and eugenics, both mainstream modes of thinking at the time. Through the prism of eastern Mediterranean migrants, we will reflect on W. E. B. Dubois’ famous statement: “The problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line.”
Not familiar to the broader American public in terms of their languages, cultures, customs, and appearances; stemming from an empire shaped by the tenets of Islam; and targeted for immigration restriction: Jews, Christians, and Muslims from the Ottoman Empire—reconfigured in ethnic or national terms as Sephardic Jews, Greeks, Armenians, Turks, and Arabs (often known then as “Syrians”)—entered a country mythologized as a place free of persecution where the streets were allegedly paved with gold. Through an exploration of a wide array of sources, including firsthand testimonies, retrospective memoirs, film, music, laws and government documents, newspaper articles, cartoons, and podcasts we will investigate the world these migrants left in Salonica, Istanbul, or Aleppo, and call into question deeply entrenched beliefs about the nature of the United States as a “nation of immigrants.” What challenges did they encounter en route to, and upon arrival in, the co-called new world, whether New York or Seattle? What price did they have to pay if they sought to become “really” American—or “white”? Why did some if not many abandon the “American dream” and return home? What are the echoes of their experiences today in American politics and culture? What links, if any, connect them to Europe or the Middle East? What are the implications of their historical experiences for thinking about the immigration debate today?
Course Goals and Objectives:
Content
- To become familiar with the intersections and divergences in the histories of the Ottoman Empire and the United States.
- To understand the changing geographic, political, cultural, religious, and racial criteria that have drawn and redrawn the boundaries between “Europe” and the “Middle East” over the generations.
- To recognize the ways in which religious categories—Muslims, Christians, and Jews--that organized the Ottoman Empire were transformed into ethnic or national categories in the 19th and 20th centuries due to local, regional, and global factors.
- To understand the histories of the Ottoman Empire in both the Balkan and Middle Eastern contexts, its political structure and transformation in the 19th and 20th centuries, causes for its dissolution, and motives that stirred migration.
- To think critically about the concept of the United States as a “nation of immigrants”
- To think critically about concepts like “migrant,” “immigrant,” and “emigrant,” and to understand migration as a process of movement in multiple directions.
- To interrogate the construction and meanings of racial categories in the United States, specifically “whiteness” in its contested legal, social, and cultural contexts, and especially the distinction between “scientific” and “visual” understandings of race.
- To recognize the ways in which migrants from the eastern Mediterranean, at the crossroads of Europe and the Middle east, challenge(d) American racial definitions
- To understand the origin and development of immigration restrictions and naturalization exclusions in the United States and the central role that race and racism play.
- To understand the ways in which migrants from the Ottoman Empire shaped various aspects of American life, including in Seattle.
Craft
- To analyze and interrogate a wide array of sources and identify their perspectives: all sources have “biases.”
- To recognize that “history” is not a regurgitation of “facts,” but rather that historical narratives emerge through a dynamic process of human interpretation.
- To empower students to recognize that they can become active “makers” of history through compelling and convincing writing.
Consciousness
- To bring the past to life and recognize its relevance and power in the present.
- To think critically about where you stand on the continuum of human history and world geography and to question your perception of that position especially as it relates to the history of migration.
Requirements and Grades:
1. Participation and weekly posts and replies in online Discussion Board: 30 %
A vital set of components of this class will be both in-class participation and our discussion board, a space where we can express our ideas and engage in conversation with each other. It is also the place where the instructor can gauge your understanding and investment in our subject, and to follow the dialogue that develops among the members of the class.
You will be responsible for crafting at least TWO weekly posts throughout the course. Please complete the week’s readings, lectures, and other course materials prior to crafting your posts. Each post should be 150-300 words. You must post your response by 5 pm the night before the session on which you will comment
In addition to the three weekly posts, you will also be responsible for at least TWO brief replies of 50-100 words to your classmates’ posts. You may choose to reply to any, and as many, of your classmates’ posts. Please feel free to develop threads and conversations. But your replies will only count toward the minimum of three when you post them during weeks other than the ones for which you are responsible for the longer posts. You must post your reply to your classmates response by the start of the session to which you are responding.
In crafting your posts, please follow these three guidelines:
- From the week's readings (either primary or secondary sources), select a specific phrase or short passage of no more than a couple of lines that really caught your attention. Please copy or type out that particular phrase or passage at the start of your post.
- Please describe what struck you about the specific passage you have chosen to highlight. Please read carefully and please make a point. Your point should demonstrate that you’ve done the readings, but please do not spend much time reiterating the material. Assume everyone has else has also done the readings. Instead, reflect critically and thoughtfully on material and make an informed point.
- Finally, please consider concluding with a question to generate additional responses from your classmates. See some netiquette tips here.
2. Midterm: 30 % uploaded onto Canvas: prompt posted on canvas April 28; due May 5 by midnight
The midterm exam will involve: 1) short answer identifications of key terms; 2) analyses of key quotations; and 3) a 750-1000 word essay in which you will draw upon historical evidence from the course to develop a convincing argument about a theme/question of contemporary relevance. You will receive the prompt one week prior to the due date.
3. Final: 40 % uploaded onto Canvas prompt distributed last day of class, June 2; due June 9 by midnight
The final exam will follow the same format as the midterm and will involve: 1) short answer identifications of key terms; 2) analyses of key quotations; and 3) a 750-1000 word essay in which you will draw upon historical evidence from the course to develop a convincing argument about a theme/question of contemporary relevance. You will receive the prompt one week prior to the due date.
Late Assignments: Extensions will be granted on a case by case basis. If you need an extension please inform the instructor and/or TA prior to the deadline. Late papers will be penalized.
Course Materials:
All course materials will be accessible in digital format for free with the following exceptions:
- Elia Kazan, dir., America, America, may be rented or purchased via Amazon for $1.99.
- “Who Do You Think You Are?” S7, E6, 5/1/2016, may be purchased and viewed on Youtube or Amazon for $2.99.
- Hari Kandabolu, dir. The Problem with Apu (2017) available HBO Max, AmazonPrime, Hulu
Class Schedule
The course syllabus is a living document; readings may be altered
- 3/29 Welcome, Orientation, Framing Questions
2. 3/31: Starting Points: 1492
3. 4/5 Muslims, Christians, Jews between Europe and the Middle East
- Karen Barkey, "The Ottomans and Toleration"
4. 4/7 Ottoman Modernity and the Black Mediterranean
- Akram Khater, ed, Sources in the Study of the Modern Middle East,10-21 (Focus on 1839 and 1856 edicts) Khater - Ottoman Reforms.pdf
- Michael Fergeson, "Abolitionism and the African Slave Trade in the Ottoman Empire (1857-1922)"
5. 4/12 “Unmixing of Peoples”: Revolution, War, Genocide, Population "Exchange"
- Young Turk Revolution (1908) Young Turk Proclamation 1908.pdf
- Treaty of Lausanne on the exchange of populations between Greece and Turkey (1923) Treaty of Lausanne.pdf
- Reşat Kasaba, “Dreams of Empire, Dreams of Nation,” in Joseph Esherick, et al., Empire to Nation: Historical Perspectives on the Making of the Modern World (Oxford, 2006), 198-225. Kasaba - dreams.pdf
- Twice a Stranger, 8-minute documentary about the Exchange of Populations
6. 4/14 Mobility and Migration: from the Ottoman provinces to the cities and beyond
- Elia Kazan (director), America, America (Warner Bros, 1963) (film) on Amazon $1.99
- a short except from Elia Kazan's autobiography, pp. 13-24. Kazan, Elia_ A Life.pdf
7. 4/19 Coming to America
- Rifat Bali, From Anatolia to the New World, selections : Bali_From Anatolia to the New World.pdf
- select one or two stories from each of the sections relating to different communities:
- Jews, pp. 126-191
- Armenians, pp. 214-250
- Greeks, pp. 259-301
- Turks, pp. 338-383
- select one or two stories from each of the sections relating to different communities:
- Ottoman History Podcast: Deporting Ottoman Americans (2018)
8. 4/21 Visions of America
- Emma Lazarus, “The New Colossus” (1883)
- Thomas Bailey Aldrich, “Unguarded Gates” (1895)
- Horace Kallen, “Democracy Versus the Melting Pot,” The Nation (18-25 February 1915)
- Theodore Roosevelt, “Hyphenated Americans” (1915)
- Charlie Chaplin, The Immigrant (1917)
- Mai Ngai, “‘A Nation of Immigrants’: The Cold War and Civil Rights Origins of Illegal Immigration,” Occasional Papers of the School of Social Science, April 2010, Paper No. 38.
9. 4/26 Race, Whiteness, and American Citizenship
- “Is the Turk a White Man?” The New York Times, September 30, 1909
- Ian Haney López, White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race, “White Lines,” pp. 1-14; Appendix A: “The Racial Prerequisite Cases,” Appendix B: “Excerpts from Prerequisite Cases”
- Ottoman History Podcast: Syrian in Sioux Falls (2018).
10. 4/28 “Race Science” and Immigration Restriction
- “Who Do You Think You Are?” S7, E6, May 1, 2016, featuring Lea Michele youtube $2.99 or Amazon
- Immigration and Naturalization Case File: Benuta Veissy, 1917-1920. Veissy, Benouta INS File-1.pdf Veissy, Benouta INS File-2.pdf
- Selections from U. S. Congressional Hearings on Immigration, 1924
- Mae Ngai, “The Architecture of Race in American Immigration Law: A Reexamination of the Immigration Act of 1924,” Journal of American History 86, no. 1 (1999): 67-92.
- Ottoman History Podcast: Turkino (2019)
11. 5/3 The First "Muslim Ban" and what Mormons, Armenians, and Jews have to do with it
- Lim - Mormons and Mohammedans- Race, Religion, and the Anti-Polygamy Bar in US Immigration Law.pdf
- Excerpts from New York Times articles
12. 5/5 Building New Communities
- Ottoman History Podcast: Ottoman New York (2017)
- Bali, From Anatolia to the New World, selections
- Isil Acehan, “‘Ottoman Street’ in America,” International Review of Social History 54 (2009): 19-44.
- Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill, “Armenian Refugee Women: The Picture Brides, 1920-1930,” Journal of American Ethnic History 12, no. 3 (Spring 1993): 3-29
13. 5/10 Claiming Columbus
- Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, Not a Nation of Immigrants: Settler Colonialism, White Supremacy, and a History of Erasure and Exclusion, ch 6. "Americanizing Columbus," 149-178. via UW Libraries here (Links to an external site.)
- Forward from Moise Gadol, Columbus was a Spanish Jew, 1941Gadol - Columbus was a Spanish Jew _compressed.pdf
- Excerpts from Seraphim Canoutas, Christopher Columbus: A Greek Nobleman, 1943. Claiming Columbus Greeks.pdf
- Naar_ Mediterranean to America12 columbus.pdf
14. 5/12 Radical Politics and Organized Labor
- Devin E. Naar, "The Rise, Fall, and Erasure of the Ladino Left," article-in-progress for a volume on "radical jewish politics;" your comments and suggestions for me are welcomed! Naar_Ladino Left revised draft 2022-4-18.pdf
- Kostis Karpozilos, dir., Greek-American Radicals: An Untold Story (documentary, 2013) (62 minutes)
- Unpublished Investigative Report of the Bureau of Investigation (predecessor of the FBI) into the activities of New York's Sephardic Branch of the Socialist Party and its newspaper, El Proletario, 1918. (note that this is a surveillance document and is full of errors, not least of which is the mistranslation in at least one place of "Sephardic" as "separatist"!). FBI report combined.pdf
15. 5/17 Walking the City of Seattle
- University of Washington Campus Indigenous Walking Tour
- Black Heritage Society of Washington State's Virtual Tour of the Central District
- Washington Jewish Museum Sephardic Jewish Map Tour
- Rachel Better, "New Virtual Tours Highlight Black and Jewish History in Seattle's Central District (Links to an external site.)," KIRO Radio, June 16, 2021
16. 5/19 Mediterranean Imprints on the Pacific Northwest
- Molly Cone, et al, Family of Strangers: Building a Jewish Community in Washington State (Seattle, 2003), 60-76.Cone - Family of Strangers.pdf
- Dorothea Mootafes, et al., A History of Saint Demetrios Greek Orthodox Church and Her People (Seattle, 2007), 57-81; continue reading after that if you'd like! Greeks in Seattle.pdf
- Seattle Times article (in two parts):
- Stephen Sadis, dir. Sephardic Jews and the Pike Place Market
17, 5/24 Post-WWII Restructuring and the Invention of the "Nation of Immigrants"
- John F. Kennedy, Nation of Immigrants (1958), excerpt
- Ngai - Nation of Immigrants.pdf
18. 5/26 Mediterranean Food, Mediterranean Music
- Adela Peeva, dir., Whose is this song? (Bulgaria, 2003)
- Misirlou - Stories of a song from the Mediterranean to the U.S.
- Maureen Jackson, "Bailar a la Turka: 78 rpm records in Seattle Sepharadi households"
- Ari Ariel, "The Hummus Wars", Gastronomica, 2012. (new link)
- "Give Chickpeas a Chance"(NPR, 2017)
- "The Kaffenion Connection: How the Greek Diner evolved," New York Times, 1996.
19. 5/31 Popular Culture, Representation, and Color Lines Today
- “The US Census sees Middle Eastern and North African People as White; Many Don't." NPR, February 17, 2022.
- Ren Ellis Neyra, "The Kardashians' Multiracial White Supremacy," Public Books, October 22, 2020
- John Terhanian, "Is Kim Kardashian White? (And Why Does It Matter Anyway?) Racial Fluidity, Identity Mutability & the Future of Civil Rights Juris Prudence," Houston Law Review 58, no. 1 (2020).
- Hari Kandabolu, dir. The Problem with Apu (2017)
- Jason Zinoman, "Akaash Singh and his case for bringing back Apu," The New York Times, March 4, 2022.
20. 6/2 (Im)migration Today
- "Trevor Noah contrasts Europe's embarrassingly unequal treatment of Ukrainian and Syrian refugees" (Links to an external site.) (video).
- "Race, culture and politics underpin how - and if - refugees are welcomed in Europe (Links to an external site.)" (Npr)
- "Non-Ukrainian refugees are trapped between racism and Cold War geopolitics" (Links to an external site.) (Vox)