What does it mean to be an American? For much of our history to be an an American meant to be a “WASP.” These White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant were for the most part the founders of the country and have dominated the country since then. Let’s take a closer look and see how much this still applies to the idea of an American.
First lets examine the first letter of WASP, white. For generations whites, or those descended from Europe, and more specifically white males have been the epitome of what an American is. However lets look at the data. In the 2010 Census about 72% reported as being white alone. 72% of 308 million is a lot of people but that still means that about 86 million people don’t fall under the category of “white.” When we look at gender we find that there are over 5 million more women that men. So I guess that being a white male isn’t what it means to be American.
How bout the term “Anglo-Saxon?” Generally this is used to refer to people from the British Isles that were colonized by the Angles & Saxons a couple thousand years ago. For our purposes lets say that this means people who claim their ancestry as English, Irish, Scotch-Irish, Scotch, and Welsh. On a side note, I can claim all 5 of those so I guess I’m pretty Anglo-Saxon. According to a 2006 survey by the Census Bureau about 77 million people claim these ancestries. 28 million English, 36 million Irish, 5 million Scotch-Irish, 6 million Scottish, and 2 million Welsh. Impressive numbers but out of a population of just under 300 million in in 2006 that works out to about 25% of the population. Americans are most definitely not Anglo-Saxon.
In a nation that many consider to be a “Christian nation,” surely the Protestant label still applies. Indeed a 2008 college survey reported that 76% of American adults identified as Christians. The US Census bureau concurs but that still leaves approximately a quarter of American adults who do not identify as Christians. So I think we can say that to be American does not mean to be Christian.
A quick rundown shows that not everyone is white, not everyone is Anglo-Saxon, and not everyone is Christian. So is there a defining trait of Americans?
Some might point to English as being a defining trait of Americans but 54 million people report that this language is not spoken in their home. As an ESL teacher I can attest to this fact.
I started this research to try and find something that unites as Americans but all the obvious things don’t appear to work. Perhaps it is something more abstract like a desire to try and make something better of our lives but alas I can not provide a link or a source for that. Decide for yourself what it means to be American.
Who is an American?
Filed Under :
Sep.27,2011
Tags :
