¶ … Carved in Silence directed by Felicia Lowe [...] its particular value in sociological perspectives. This is a moving and emotional documentary regarding the Chinese Exclusion Act, and their subsequent incarceration on Angel Island in San Francisco Bay. It indicates how poorly America treated Chinese immigrants, and how desperately these people wanted to live and work in America.
This documentary film uses interviews of survivors of Angel Island, workers on the island, and modern day reenactments to depict the plight of the Chinese immigrants who were forced to stay on Angel Island until their immigration papers were either approved or disapproved. This practice took place from 1882 to 1943, as a result of the Chinese Exclusion Act, which limited the number of Chinese immigrants that could legally come to the United States. Immigrants who thought they were traveling to a new life in "Gold Mountain," were actually forced to stay on Angel Island and wait to be interrogated about their lives, their relatives, and even their homes and living conditions to establish they were indeed who they said they were.
The documentary is short, only 45 minutes or so, but it presents a vast amount of information in that short time. The interviews of people who stayed on Angel Island are quite compelling, but the documentary also uses modern day footage as historic recreations of what life was like on the island, from what the detainees ate, to how they wiled away the long, isolated hours. Some played games, some read, and...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now