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Gordon, Anna Pegler. "In Sight of America: Photography and U.S. Immigration Policy, 1880-1930," University of Michigan, June 2002.
Since its beginnings, the history of federal immigration law has been the history of making immigrants visible. As new laws limiting U.S. immigration were introduced in the late nineteenth century, they commonly involved new requirements for observing, documenting and photographing immigrants. This study explores three connected moments in the development of visual immigration policy: the photographic documentation of the Chinese in America starting with Chinese exclusion in the 1880s; the establishment of Ellis Island as a site for observing European immigrants in the 1890s; the implementation of photographic identity cards on the Mexican-U.S. border in the 1910s and 1920s. These histories show how the emergent visual regimes of criminal, medical, and ethnographic photography played a significant role in the development of federal immigration policy and the introduction of racial immigration restrictions. Between 1882 and 1928, the United States introduced and expanded a racialized system of immigration restriction through Chinese exclusion, Mexican-U.S. border regulation and quotas based on national origins. As each new restriction was introduced, it was underpinned by a racialized system of visual and photographic regulation. Chinese, European, and Mexican migrants were subject to different policies and practices of photographic representation, which reflected and reinforced the Immigration Bureau’s understanding of their racial identities. However, they resisted these policies in varied ways, from controlling their own photographic representations to manipulating photographic identity documentation. In the process, they not only shaped the implementation of immigration policy but also challenged the evidentiary authority of photography.
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