Social Service Review
Volume 80, Issue 4, 2006, Pages 705-734
"Little alien colonies": Representations of immigrants and their neighborhoods in social work discourse, 1875-1924 (Article)
Park Y.* ,
Kemp S.P.
-
a
Smith College, School for Social Work, Northampton, MA, United States
-
b
University of Washington, School for Social Work, Seattle, WA, United States
Abstract
The "vexed problem of immigration," as Jane Addams (1909, 214) termed it, became a central issue for the emerging social work profession. Through a close reading of social work's public documents in the period from 1875 to 1924, this article analyzes the complex discursive mechanisms by which early social workers made immigrants and their environments legible as objects of intervention and advocacy. In particular, it examines the parallel social and moral calculi employed in social work's analysis of immigrants and their "little alien colonies" (e.g., Greenleigh 1941, 208). Despite good intentions, social workers often viewed immigrants as dependent, abject, and exotic subjects; at a deeper register than their expressed interest in "the needs and possibilities of the immigrant" (Abbott 1917, 282), social work representations underscored and supported the problematization of immigrants in the public discourse. Contemporary social work faces many of the same dilemmas in fashioning a response to immigration. © 2006 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.
Author Keywords
[No Keywords available]
Index Keywords
[No Keywords available]
Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33845576023&doi=10.1086%2f507934&partnerID=40&md5=8c181cfccf49594774f26d2e6ff4d736
DOI: 10.1086/507934
ISSN: 00377961
Cited by: 28
Original Language: English