The paper discusses the changing role of ethnicity in immigrant narratives with the example of Francine Prose's novel My New American Life (2011). It is a multidimensional work of fiction which presents ethnicity as a cultural and social asset. The novel brings into play and revisits a tradition of the novel of manners. It uses American cultural and social stereotypes to tailor the main character’s new identity of existential inbetweenness. and to represent the American realities of the Bush-Cheney era through the filter of the protagonist’s perspective as a semi-legal alien of a suspicious ethnic background. The paper problematizes the geopolitical challenges of immigration that the novel’s characters deal with in post-9/11 America. The article argues that in the novel, immigration is presented as a process with a distinct social dimension, prioritizing safety and welfare over the values of democracy and personal freedom.
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