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Bridging Three Worlds: Hungarian-Jewish Americans, 1848-1914

Autor Robert Perlman
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 7 oct 2009
Between 1848 and 1914, approximately 100,000 Jews emigrated from Hungary to the United States. They came in two waves. The first group, catalyzed by the 1848 revolutions against the Austrian monarchy, consisted mainly of political dissidents and well educated, cosmopolitan, middle-class Jews seeking greater personal, religious, and political freedoms in the New World. The second and much larger group, which began to arrive around 1880, consisted primarily of unskilled laborers and lower-middle-class artisans and tradespeople, beckoned to America by the promise of vast economic opportunity.  
In the abundant literature on Jewish immigration to the United States, virtually nothing has been written specifically about the Hungarian-Jewish experience, which differed in many respects from that of other Jewish national groups. Bridging Three Worlds offers such a chronicle, relating the immigrants’ history from their political and cultural roots in the Old Country to their acculturation as citizens in a newly adopted land. Based on primary archival materials, oral histories, and secondary sources, the book is also informed by the author’s own experiences as an American of Hungarian-Jewish origins. 
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781558497832
ISBN-10: 1558497838
Pagini: 316
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press

Notă biografică

ROBERT PERLMAN is professor emeritus at the Florence Heller Graduate School for Advanced Studies in Social Welfare, Brandeis University. His published books include Family Home Care: Critical Issues for Services and Policies, Family in the Energy Crisis: Implications for Theory and Policy, and Consumers and Social Services

Cuprins

List of Illustrations and Tables 
 
Preface and Acknowledgments 
1. The People in this Book
In Hungary
2. A Very Short History of Hungary 
3. Jews and Magyars 
4. The Quid pro Quo Arrangement 
5. Religion, Language, and Folklore 
6. Two Jewries
Migrating and Settling
7. The ‘48ers 
8. Three Families 
9. The Big Migration 
10. Urban Colonies 
11. Small Town Diaspora 
Three Worlds 
12. The Magyar Connection
13. The Jewish Bond 
14. The American Door 
15. Flickers and Reflections 
16. Tables
17.Estimating the Number Who Came to America 
18. Passenger Lists, Citizenship Applications, and the U.S. Census of 1880
19. Questionaries, Organizations, and Historical and Genealogical Societies 
Notes 
Bibliography 
Index 

Recenzii

“We are in Robert Perlman's debt. He has provided a readable account of a neglected immigrant group. . . . He demonstrates throughout this work both the deep internalization of Jewish identity and the power of Americanization.”—Gerald Sorin,Journal of American Ethnic History