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American Warsaw - The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Polish Chicago (Paperback)
Loot Price: R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
You Save: R58
(10%)
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American Warsaw - The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Polish Chicago (Paperback)
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List price R576
Loot Price R518
Discovery Miles 5 180
You Save R58 (10%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Every May, a sea of 250,000 people decked out in red and white head
to Chicago's Loop to celebrate the Polish Constitution Day Parade.
In the city, you can tune in to not one but four different
Polish-language radio stations or jam out to the Polkaholics. You
can have lunch at pierogi food trucks or pick up paczkis at the
grocery store. And if you're lucky, you get to take off work for
Casimir Pulaski Day. For more than a century, Chicago has been home
to one of the largest Polish populations outside of Poland, and the
group has had an enormous influence on the city's culture and
politics. Yet, until now, there has not been a comprehensive
history of the Chicago Polonia. With American Warsaw, award-winning
historian and Polish American Dominic A. Pacyga chronicles more
than a century of immigration, and later emigration back to Poland,
showing how the community has continually redefined what it means
to be Polish in Chicago. He takes us from the Civil War era until
today, focusing on how three major waves of immigrants, refugees,
and fortune seekers shaped and then redefined the Polonia. Pacyga
also traces the movement of Polish immigrants from the peasantry to
the middle class and from urban working-class districts dominated
by major industries to suburbia. He documents Polish Chicago's
alignments and divisions: with other Chicago ethnic groups; with
the Catholic Church; with unions, politicians, and city hall; and
even among its own members. And he explores the ever-shifting sense
of Polskosc, or "Polishness." Today Chicago is slowly being
eclipsed by other Polish immigrant centers, but it remains a
vibrant-and sometimes contentious-heart of the Polish American
experience. American Warsaw is a sweeping story that expertly
depicts a people who are deeply connected to their historical home
and, at the same time, fiercely proud of their adopted city. As
Pacyga writes, "While we were Americans, we also considered
ourselves to be Poles. In that strange Chicago ethnic way, there
was no real difference between the two."
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