In spite of "endless talk of difference", American society is an amazing machine for homogenizing people. There is "the democratizing
uniformity of dress and
discourse, and the casualness and absence of deference"
characteristic of popular culture. People are absorbed into "a culture of consumption" launched by the 19th--century department stores that offered "vast arrays of goods in an
elegant atmosphere. Instead of intimate shops catering to a knowledgeable elte," these were stores "anyone could enter,
regardless of class or background. This turned shopping into a public and democratic act." The mass media, advertising and spots are other forces for homogenization.
Immigrants are quickly
fitting into this common culture, which may not be altogether elevating but is hardly
poisonous. Writing for the National Immigration Forum, Gregory Rodriguez reports that today's
immigration is neither at
unprecedented levels nor resistant to assimilation. In 1998
immigrants were 9.8 percent of population; in 1900, 13.6 percent. In the 10 years prior to 1990, 3.1 immgrants arrived for every 1,000. In the 10 years prior to 1890, 9.2 for every 1,000 .Now, consider three indices of similation-language, home
ownership and intermarriage.
The 1990 Census revealed that "a majority of
immigrants from each of the fifteen most common countries of origin spoke English "well" or "very well" after ten years of residence." The children of
immigrants tend to be bilingual and proficient in English. "By the third generation, the original language is lost in the majority of
immigrants who had arrived before 1970 had a home
ownership rate of 75.6 percent, higher than the 69.8 percent rate among native-born Americans.
Foreign-born Asians and Hispanics "have higher rates of intermarriage than do US-born whites and blacks." By the third generation, one third of Hispanic women are married to non-Hispanics, and 41 percent of Asian-Ameican women are married to non-Asians.
Rodrigues notes that children in remote villages around the world are fans of superstars lile Arnold Schwarzenegger and Garth Brooks, yet "some Americans fear that
immigrant living within the United States remain somehow immune to the nation's assimilative power."
Are there divisive issues and pockets of seething anger in America? Indeed. It is big enough to have a bit of everything. But particularly when viewed against America's
turbulent past, today's social induces hardly suggest a dark and deteriorating social environment.
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