Fresh Fruit Broken Bodies Summary

1860 Words4 Pages

America has always been a melting pot, all different cultures mingling together for the same purpose: to be able to achieve the American Dream. To be able to work towards a better life, to be free of troubles and hardships… or how that it is often perceived. Working towards a better life is difficult for anyone, especially for those who reside in the United States that might not be full citizens. In the book Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies by Seth Holmes, the author focuses on the hardships of one group in particular. Latino migrant farm workers, documented and undocumented, face challenges when entering or living in our country. From making their way into the U.S., trying to find work and adequate living quarters, and trying not to be affected …show more content…

I try and keep up with topical debates about this and related topics, and focus on the upcoming presidential campaigns regarding themco. I started becoming more invested into immigration and undocumented workers as I came to Berea. Being here has increased the scope of my knowledge regarding all sorts of problems related to this issue; being able to meet and talk to people who have personally been affected by these kind of problems has helped me to create a much more personal relation to this. But, I feel as if all I had known about this subject came from the ideas of the general public, I still would have been able to consider myself knowledgeable (to a fault) about immigration. There is enough information visible regarding immigration anymore that the general public should be able to keep up to date. For the uneducated viewer, the majority of what they know about immigration would seem to be that it is bad, send everyone back, they are taking our jobs, etc. Yet, there are some good, non-partisan, un biased news sources that seek to inform the everyday reader of the pro’s and con’s of migrant workers/immigration. These resources tend to be harder to come by, and they typically aren’t the main few news powers, but they are readily available. However, the majority of the public would only know what the main news consensus is, which in current day America, tends to be much more racist and ignorant than

Open Document