If national stereotypes aren’t rooted in real experiences, then where do they come from?
One possibility is that they reflect national values, which may emerge from historical events. For example, many historians have argued that the spirit of American individualism has its origins in the experiences of the pioneers in the Old West.
Social scientists such as psychologist Richard Robins have proposed several other possible explanations for stereotypes and why they may be inaccurate. In a commentary that accompanies the Science study, Robins notes that some stereotypes may have been accurate at one point in history and then persisted while the culture changed.
Day: October 9, 2005
The Bracero Project
The purpose of this project is to recover the history of the border agricultural workers, from their origins in rural Mexico, to the agricultural fields of America. This history has been ignored by both countries. Close to 5 million braceros helped this country, yet nobody remembers them. Once they were no longer needed in the United States, the Mexicans who participated in the Bracero Program had to return to their homelands without ever receiving, to this day, recognition for their valuable contribution.
We need to control our borders, but it is always a good idea to learn some history before making new laws.