ABSTRACT

This article examines the racial perception of the Italian immigrants who arrived in the United States in the decades of mass influxes from Europe, focusing on regional differences and the transformations of the newcomers’ identity over the years. Italians usually held a middle ground between whites and blacks in the East until the Second World War witnessed the full recognition of their Caucasian status. Conversely, even at the very beginning of their stay, the immigrants’ whiteness was hardly challenged in the West. Such dynamics demonstrate that place should be added to time as a key variable to understand Italian Americans’ racialisation.