Round Trip To America Summary

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When discussing immigration it is very hard to talk about the emotions immigrants had when entering the country because no one knows their experience first-hand except them. Essays like “Coming and Going: Round-Trip to America” by Mark Wyman and “Permanently Lost: The Trauma of Immigration” by Victor Greene give readers a better insight on the mindsights of immigrants by telling the why and how of their journeys. In “Coming and Going….”,Wyman talks about immigrants entering the United States for the sole purpose of making a steady income to support themselves and their families at home. In “Permanently Lost…”, Greene goes in depth about the mistreatment faced by immigrants and how music and dance became an outlet to the oppression. Both essays …show more content…

Wyman used first-hand accounts from immigrants through the form of letters and interviews. Wyman also uses facts and statistics like the data on immigrant success rates. In that statistic from a 1934 study he states that, “40.3 percent (255 persons) reported good results in America, 17.3 percent (109) had “quite good” results and only 16.4 percent (104) had fair results.” This strengthens his argument that the “labor was essential” in order for the immigrants to be stable and successful in their homelands. In Victor Greene’s essay, he goes in depth on what obstacles the immigrants faced and what topics they decided to sing about. With that being said his main form of evidence is song. For example, he talks about the journey of Jewish immigrants and how in most circumstances only the men traveled to America. With the men being out of the home, wives were left in charge of the home and the family and most fell into a for lack of a better word depression because their families were separated. To support this idea, Greene includes the lyrics of “Shlof Mein Kind”, the emotion is especially felt in the first few lines were the song says “Sleep my child/By your cradle your mother sits/Sings a song and weeps.” This strengthens his argument that the obstacles of immigration ruined not only the immigrants, but the families of the immigrants. Many wives were left unable to support themselves and their

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