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The Melting Pot and the Altar - Marital Assimilation in Early Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (Paperback, Minnesota Archi)
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The Melting Pot and the Altar - Marital Assimilation in Early Twentieth-Century Wisconsin (Paperback, Minnesota Archi)
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The Melting Pot and the Altar was first published in 1981.
Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make
long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published
unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions.
Recent studies of assimilation in nineteenth-century America have
focused on the ways in which immigrant groups maintained separate
identities rather than on their absorption in American society. In
The Melting Pot and the Altar Richard M. Bernard puts to test the
theory of the melting pot. He concludes that although cultural and
structural pluralism deserves attention so does interaction between
the host society and the immigrants Through extensive quantitative
analysis of census reports and marriage records Bernard studies the
pattern of intergroup marriage - the ultimate test of assimilation
- during a period of massive migration to this country. His
research on eleven immigrant groups and the native-born population
in Wisconsin suggests that there was considerable intergroup
mixing. Moreover, once allowance is made for differing times of
arrival, immigration generations, and rural or urban residences,
the assimilative patterns of Western and Eastern European groups
were remarkably similar. An examination of several factors, such as
occupation, age, location, and birthplace of parents, shows that
certain demographic and social characteristics rather than any
particular ethnic identification increased the likelihood that an
individual would marry outside his or her group. The Melting Pot
and the Altar is the first multiple variable analysis of marital
assimilation in an entire state whose immigration patterns is
similar to that of the nation. Both historians and sociologist will
find this work of interest as an example of quantitative
methodology and for its new evidence on an important subject.
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