Able to Be American: Disability in US Immigration Policy and the American Jewish Response
Hardcover
$99.00
Premium Members save an extra 10% and all Members collect stamps to save with Rewards. 10 stamps = $5.Learn More
Epilepsy. Heart disease. Varicose veins. “Feeble-mindedness.” In 1891, Congress unambiguously codified the popular sentiment that “defects” like these should preclude admission to the United States. Expanding the eugenics-rooted restrictions of the 1882 Immigration Act, the new law conflated illness, poverty, and disability with criminality and “moral turpitude,” starkly revealing Congress’s vision of the “ideal” American. Simultaneously, American Jews sought security and acceptance in the ...







![Sapiens [Tenth Anniversary Edition]: A Brief History of Humankind](https://cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0674/5433/7265/files/9780063422001_p0.jpg?v=1765253180&width=100&height=150&crop=center)














