Making an American Citizen is a 1912 silent comedy short film by the pioneering French woman filmmaker Alice Guy-Blaché, produced at Solax Studios. Originally advertised as "educational drama" or "educational subject," it grapples with the theme of immigration, assimilation, and of becoming a "good American." The film carries an explicit feminist message: the lopsided power dynamics in an immigrant couple becomes increasingly equalized, as the couple spends more time in America. The wife learns to stand up to her husband's abuses, while the husband is repeatedly coerced by other American citizens into treating his wife as his equal, until he is able to internalize the ethos of the Progressive Era. The film works to allay anxieties over Eastern European immigrant men bringing "Old World" patriarchal values and practices to the "New World."

Making an American Citizen (1912)
Directed by Alice Guy
Genres - Comedy, Drama, Silent Film |
Sub-Genres - Silent Film |
Release Date - Oct 30, 1912 |
Run Time - 16 min. |
Description by Wikipedia
Movie Info
Themes
Tags
America, Eastern European, Husband, Old World, Progressive Era, Solax Studios
Attributes
Subject: about abuse
Alternate Titles
Americanização
BR
El americanizado
ES
L'Américanisé
FR
Making an American Citizen
US
Становление американского гражданина
RU