Immigration To America Analysis

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Pages: 7

What does it mean to be an immigrant to America in the modern world?

This question has always been "How does it feel like to be a problem?" (Byoumi, Page 7). While nobody ever openly says this question aloud, they often sugar coat around it and sooner or later that it is what they would wish to know. Those first realizations that the narrators and/or the writers of the books were a “problem”, typically dawned on them, once they left their homes and try to start and manage a new life in America.

Main characters in those readings usually attend integrated schools, once they reach America and try to blend as well as they can to accept new habits and tradition of the new environment. As part of a class, for example, students are supposed to
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The one that sometimes ends up with death casualties, but almost always leads to wide disappointment. Much of the literature deals with the subject of immigration and discusses the hardships each family, without the difference, is faced when they find themselves in new setting. Haiti, Afghani, Caribbean, Middle East, etc. are all regions from where incessant rivers of people risk their lives each year, in order to forgo their home countries in a quest for better life in The United States of …show more content…
There is yet another impact that new state exhorts on personal and family lives of expatriates. As they struggle to develop deeper social relationships and gain trust of new community, at the same time they keep memories of the known habits and traditions, preserving their dignity that way.

The Jim Sheridan movie “In America” maybe sums up universal migrants’ story in the most visceral manner than the literature: by connecting personal experiences with new social orders and historical events, the immigrant identity gets crushed in between the two. Quite analogous and related to Baba from The Kite Runner finding difficulties adapting himself to the poorer standard of living after Afghani experience (Hosseini, 319).

One of the reasons this universal issue stands out from so many others analyzed in literature is that the stories, as well as the books referenced, catch all the tense, hopeful, and fearful complexities of a grieving family members who cannot keep up to the challenges of taking care of each other in a new setting. My conclusion for this paper would be to once again affirm the role of family and emotional ties in émigrés’s lives and the process which new society impose on personal developments of the main characters in the long