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  • HfJS Heidelberg  (2)
  • Vienna  (2)
  • 1990-1994  (2)
  • Ann Arbor : Univ. of Michigan Press  (1)
  • New York [u.a.] : Holmes & Meier  (1)
  • Berkeley u.a. : Univ. of California Press
  • Joden  (2)
  • 1
    ISBN: 0841911525
    Language: English
    Pages: XIII, 269 S. , Ill., Kt.
    Year of publication: 1994
    Series Statement: Ellis island series
    DDC: 973/.04924031
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    Keywords: Geschichte 1820-1914 ; Immigratie ; Joden ; Einwanderer ; Geschichte ; Juden ; Migration ; Immigrants History ; Jews Migrations ; Jews, German History ; Einwanderung ; Auswanderung ; Juden ; Deutschland ; USA ; Germany Emigration and immigration ; United States Emigration and immigration ; United States Ethnic relations ; USA ; Deutschland ; Deutsch-Juden ; Einwanderung ; USA ; Deutsch-Juden ; Geschichte 1820-1914 ; Deutschland ; Juden ; USA ; Einwanderung ; Geschichte 1820-1914 ; Deutschland ; Juden ; Auswanderung ; USA ; Geschichte 1820-1914 ; USA ; Einwanderung ; Juden ; Deutschland ; Geschichte 1820-1914
    Abstract: The many thousands of Jews from German-speaking lands who came to the United States throughout the nineteenth century played a major part in laying the foundations of the Jewish community in America. The author considers these immigrants a branch of German Jewry, compelled to seek overseas the political and civil rights denied them at home. In this volume of the Ellis Island Series, the fascinating story of this mass immigration of mostly poor, enterprising, young people is told in vivid detail. Drawing on rare letters, diaries, memoirs, period newspapers, journals, and other firsthand accounts, Barkai traces the process of family-oriented chain migration, resettlement, and acculturation, exploring as well the group's relations with the Jewish community in Germany and with German and Jewish immigrants in the New World. Often starting out as peddlers and storekeepers, the immigrants moved back and forth from East Coast towns and cities to settlements in the South, Midwest, and Far West, helping to expand the American frontier and to develop cities such as Cincinnati St. Louis, Milwaukee, and San Francisco. The narrative chronicles their experiences in the goldfields of California, on Indian reservations, and during the Civil War, in which German-Jewish soldiers in the Union and Confederate armies struggled against bigotry to assert their civil rights. These engaging personal narratives are woven into an account of the formative role played by German-Jewish immigrants in establishing the institutional framework of the American-Jewish community. Their influential network of mutual aid and philanthropic organizations would be challenged, at the turn of the century, by the great mass migration of Jews from Eastern Europe. The author's presentation of the dramatic encounter between these two groups sheds new light not only on this critical period in American-Jewish history but also on the dynamics of cultural change in a pluralist society.
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  • 2
    ISBN: 0472104373
    Language: English
    Pages: XII, 290 S. , Kt.
    Year of publication: 1994
    Series Statement: Social history, popular culture, and politics in Germany
    DDC: 305.892/4043
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    Keywords: Geschichte 1777-1918 ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Antisemitisme ; Emancipatie ; Joden ; Antisemitismus ; Geschichte ; Juden ; Politik ; Antisemitism History ; Jews Emancipation ; Jews Public opinion ; National socialism ; Public opinion ; Antisemitismus ; Judenemanzipation ; Deutschland ; Bavaria (Germany) Politics and government 1777-1918 ; Germany Ethnic relations ; Bayern ; Bayern ; Antisemitismus ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Bayern ; Judenemanzipation ; Geschichte 1800-1900 ; Bayern ; Antisemitismus ; Geschichte 1777-1918 ; Bayern ; Judenemanzipation ; Geschichte 1777-1918
    Abstract: In The People Speak! James F. Harris argues that modern German anti-Semitism has its roots in the era of emancipation and revolution of the nineteenth century - from the time of the 1848 Revolution, when the Bavarian government proposed a bill to give Jews the same rights as Christians
    Abstract: While historians have known about the debates of the Bavarian parliament, they have, surprisingly, remained largely unaware of popular attitudes toward the bill and how these attitudes affected the bill's ultimate defeat in 1850. The People Speak! fills this gap
    Abstract: . This volume forces us to look backward to examine the links between the treatment of Jews in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Germany and anti-Semitism as practiced by the Nazis in the twentieth century
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