Immigration

Tamar Jacoby

Tamar Jacoby

Tamar Jacoby is president and CEO of ImmigrationWorks USA, a national federation of employers working to advance better immigration law. She’s a widely-read journalist and author, and the leading center-right advocate for immigration reform. Find out more about her below.

Q. What is your favorite word?

A. Thoughtful.

Q. What inspires you?

A. Something hard.

Q. What is your favorite way to procrastinate?

A. Read the newspaper.

Q. What music have you heard today?

A. They were playing “The Magic Flute” on the radio in the taxi.

Q. What is your favorite cocktail?

A. Grey goose, light rocks.

Q. If you could live in any other time, when would it be and why?

A. It’s hard to answer as a woman, because the times were such. But the middle of the Enlightenment, or the American Revolution, or ancient Athens would be fun.

Q. What is your greatest extravagance?

A. Travel.

Q. If you could make only one more journey, where would you go?

A. I’m dying to go to India.

Q. When you were a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?

A. A writer.

Q. What teacher or professor changed your life?

A. My high school history teacher.

*Photo by Allison Glenn.

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Articles

Feuilleton
Friday, December 3, 2010
How One Family Created Chinese America
Zócalo

The Lucky Ones, by Mae Ngai The Lucky Ones: One Family and the Extraordinary Invention of Chinese America by Mae Ngai Hyphenated cultures seem to be a natural part of California’s landscape today, but it wasn’t always so. The Lucky Ones by Mae Ngai offers a fresh look at California history by reconstructing the lives of immigrant and second generation pioneers who lived between cultures when it was not such a common phenomenon. Ngai’s narrative brings Chinese Americans into a richer tradition of historical storytelling by humanizing an ambivalent, middle-class immigrant family, situating their lives within the more well-known histories of Chinese laborers and those who suffered from the 1882 Exclusion Act.

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