population mozilla
Ethnicity:
According to the last census
(2000) [E1] [F1],
the
total population [E1] [F1]in
the U.S.
today is approximately of 300.000.000 inhabitants. Today Hispanics
represent
the new largest minority group.
- 75% of the population is of European origin
- 60% are of Mexican origin
- 12% are Afro-American
- 4% are Asian-American
- only 1% are native Americans
Language: English
is the first language; Spanish is the second.
Native
Americans
The original
inhabitants of America
were the
Indians [E1]
[E2]. Today
they are less than 2 million. Most of them live in
reserves [E1]
[E2] in
the west of the country; very few have become fully
integrated.
The
first immigrants
Since
its discovery, the U.S.
have hosted British on a large scale, who came for profit and also for
religious freedom. The first successful English colony was made of
Puritans,
who settled in a place they called Jamestown, Virginia.
These early immigrants were soon joined by
people of other nationalities throughout the 1600s and 1700s: German
farmers
settled in Pennsylvania, Swedes
founded the
colony of Delaware and the Dutch
settled in New York.
Immigrants
also came from France,
Spain and Switzerland.
When they settled, many tried to preserve the
traditions, religion and language of their particular culture. However
American
society was predominantly English – white Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP)
[E1]
[F1] [I1] and
their culture had the overriding influence. So those immigrants who did
not
want to feel separate from the dominant WASP culture learned English
and adopted
English customs.
Second
Immigration
During the 1840 and 1860, the United States received the greatest
influx of
immigrants ever: 10 million people came to America:
thousands of Chinese emigrated to California
and worked on the railroad. But the overwhelming majority
of immigrants came from northern or western
Europe to escape poor harvests,
famines or political
unrest: Irish people, Germans and southern European began to arrive in
the late
1800s: among them there were Latin, Slavic, Jewish, Italians, Poles,
Hungarians, Russians, Greeks,…
The result
was the formation of ethnic neighbourhoods in big cities, where the
immigrants
went to live in.
Process
of assimilation
After an early resentment towards immigrants –
many Americans treated them with prejudice and hostility, claiming
racial
superiority of the Nordic people of the old immigration – , they
finally manage
to assimilate them into the American society. First generations
typically faced
obstacles to assimilation on both sides: society’s discrimination and
their own
reluctance to give up their language and culture.
By the
succeeding generations, these families were able to identify themselves
as
Americans, spoke English and practised fewer ethnic traditions. By the
fourth
and fifth generation, intermarriage between ethnic groups usually
worked.
Recent
Immigration
The majority of the newest immigrants come from
Mexico, Latin
America or Asia. American
continue to debate the issue
of
immigration [E1] [E2] [ES1]
[ES2]
[I1]. Some groups in favour of tightening
immigration
restrictions argue
that overpopulation is a threat. On the other hand, many Americans
emphasize
the cultural wealth and diversity which immigrants have been bringing
to the
nation since its conception.
Identity
crisis
Americans are aware that the national ethnic,
religious identity wasp has disappeared. The well-known picture of America
as a melting pot [E1]
[E2]
[ES1]
[F1] of people,
where all groups come
together, creating a new distinct American type is not an adequate
metaphor. A
more accurate picture of American society today, one that conveys a
variety of
cultures, each preserving its own distinctiveness, is a vegetable soup.
! How to become
an
American citizen [E1][ES1] |