Keen On America

The Magical Realist United States: Jazmine Ulloa on El Paso as America’s New Ellis Island

Mar 12, 2026
Jazmine Ulloa, national immigration reporter for The New York Times and author of El Paso: Five Families and 100 Years of Blood, Migration, Race, and Memory, brings a personal El Paso perspective. She explores El Paso as America’s modern gateway. She traces shifting border identities, bipartisan enforcement of detention and deportation, and how border tactics are spreading into US cities. She weaves history, storytelling, and memory.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Impact Of The 2019 El Paso Massacre

  • Jazmine Ulloa grew up three minutes from the 2019 El Paso Walmart mass shooting that targeted Mexicans and personally knew survivors, which propelled her to return and write the book.
  • The attack cracked her reporting composure and made her pursue a deeper history of nativist violence and El Paso's border life.
INSIGHT

Nativism Is Embedded In U.S. Immigration History

  • Nativism and xenophobia are recurring structural features of U.S. immigration policy from the 19th century Chinese Exclusion to the 1924 Johnson-Reed Act.
  • Ulloa connects historical exclusions to contemporary anti-Latino and anti-Asian rhetoric shaping laws and enforcement.
ANECDOTE

Uncovering A Chinese Mexican Soldadera Lineage

  • Ulloa discovered a famed El Paso photo of a soldadera was actually a Chinese-Mexican woman and traced her descendants to prominent judges and lawyers.
  • That family's history tied into larger racial expulsions and later legal advocacy in the borderlands.
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