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English Ethnicity and Culture in North America (Hardcover)
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English Ethnicity and Culture in North America (Hardcover)
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To many, English immigrants contributed nothing substantial to the
varied palette of ethnicity in North America. While there is wide
recognition of German American, French American, African American,
and Native American cultures, discussion of English Americans as a
distinct ethnic group is rare. Yet the historians writing in
English Ethnicity and Culture in North America show that the
English were clearly immigrants too in a strange land, adding their
own hues to the American and Canadian characters. In this
collection, editor David T. Gleeson and other contributors explore
some of the continued links between England, its people, and its
culture with North America in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. These essays challenge the established view of the
English having no "ethnicity," highlighting the vibrancy of the
English and their culture in North America. The selections also
challenge the prevailing notion of the English as "invisible
immigrants." Recognizing the English as a distinct ethnic group,
similar to the Irish, Scots, and Germans, also has implications for
understanding American identity by providing a clearer picture of
how Americans often have defined themselves in the context of Old
World cultural traditions. Several contributors to English
Ethnicity and Culture in North America track the English in North
America from Episcopal pulpits to cricket fields and dance floors.
For example Donald M. MacRaild and Tanja Bueltmann explore the role
of St. George societies before and after the American Revolution in
asserting a separate English identity across class boundaries. In
addition Kathryn Lamontagne looks at English ethnicity in the
working-class culture and labor union activities of workers in Fall
River, Massachusetts. Ultimately all the work included here
challenges the idea of a coherent, comfortable Anglo-cultural
mainstream and indicates the fluid and adaptable nature of what it
meant and means to be English in North America.
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