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1. Group I---t.hyde26 (Replacement A)

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 ​​In Phuc Tran’s book, Sigh, Gone, he discusses the difficulty of figuring out his identity as an immigrant in a mostly American neighborhood. From questioning his name to determining where he fits in the social structure of his high school, Tran has to navigate learning who he is with an additional barrier to the average teenager, having a whole other culture as a large part of his life. One way that Tran finds ways to carve out his place is to read, not just to improve his vocabulary, but so he can have the same cultural references as the typical white guy, using Clifton Fadiman’s The Lifetime Reading Plan as a guide. 

 

Early in the story, Tran talks about his family’s relocation to the United States after fleeing Vietnam. After being bounced between multiple camps and multiple countries, they finally started to settle in Pennsylvania, “We needed to blend, adopt our new country as it had adopted us. My parents were navigating all the straits and inlets of living in America, holidays like Halloween and Thanksgiving, driving in the snow, the difference between ketchup and catsup.” (Tran 20).

Based on this idea and the ideas from your book, how quickly are immigrants pressured to assimilate? What aspects of culture do they need to assimilate to early, and what aspects can be avoided or pushed until later?


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Protobeing
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In my book, The Only Road, by Alexandra Diaz, relates to the question, “how quickly are immigrants pressured to assimilate?”. This book relates to the question because the first part of the novel talks about how a boy named Jamie is forced to leave the country and go live with his brother for safety reasons because of the situation he was in. Jamie is forced to assimilate in another country, to fit in and adapt to his new life style. Although moving to a new life is extremely dangerous, staying where he is right now is more life threatening than leaving. He’s quickly forced to leave his home and start a new life, “His life of being in the shadows was officially over. He had been recruited.” (Diaz 18). This quote shows how quickly immigrants are pressured to assimilate because it states how his life was immediately changed and he didn’t have any other choice but to assimilate his life completely. 

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In your quote it says that he was "recruited," recruited for what? Where does he move; which country to which country? What are some specific things he has to do to assimilate? Did he have to learn a new language, follow different social expectations, or just be more involved with his surroundings than he was where he previously lived? 

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ddarling26
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In my book, Private Label, by Kelly Yang, to answer the question: "How quickly are immigrants pressured to assimilate? What aspects of culture do they need to assimilate to early, and what aspects can be avoided or pushed until later?" is by assimiliting very fast. "Finally there's the Dunes, where I live, which is are not gated at all, and therefore the equivalent of charcoaled turd in my classmates minds." (Yang 26). He isn't rich like everyone else in the area is, therefore already setting a bad example for himself.

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