"Immigration, Incorporation and Transnationalism" is an
intriguing collection of articles and essays. It was developed to
commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of "The Journal of
American Ethnic History." Its purpose, like that of the Immigration
and Ethnic History Society, is to integrate interdisciplinary
perspectives and exciting new scholarship on important themes and
issues related to immigration and ethnic history.
The essays in this work encompass broad perspectives, cases
studies, and recent developments. Nancy Foner, in "Then and Now,"
discusses immigration to New York City from both contemporary and
historic perspectives. Christiane Harzig, in "Domestics of the
World (Unite?)" explores labor migration systems and personal
trajectories of household domestics from both global and historic
perspectives. Val Johnson, in "The Moral Aspects of Complex
Problems," looks at New York City electoral campaigns against vice
and the incorporation of immigrants from 1890-1901. Roger Daniels
delves into U.S. immigration policy in a time of war from
1939-1945. Diane Vecchio, in "Ties of Affection," relates family
narratives in the history of Italian migration. Barbara Posadas and
Roland Guyotte present Chicago's Filipinos in the aftermath of
World War II. Deborah Moore asks if anyone is ever "At Home in
America?" by revisiting second generation immigrants.
With an exceptional case study Sharron Schwartz, in "Bridging
the Great Divide," investigates the evolution and impact of Cornish
translocalism in Britain and the U.S. Carolle Charles asks if
contemporary Haitians are political refugees or economic
immigrants? Guillermo Grenier explores the creation and maintenance
of Cuban American "exile ideology" based on a 2004 survey of this
group. Ester Hernandez, in "Relief Dollars," looks at U.S. policies
toward Central America from the 1980s to the present day. In the
final essay, Louis Canikar presents the contemporary topic of the
Arab American experience. The volume also includes more than thirty
review essays making it a fundamental contribution to the
field.
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