Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups, Page 3

Front Cover
Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1980 - History - 1076 pages

From Acadians to Zoroastrians-Asians, American Indians, East Indians, West Indians, Europeans, Latin Americans, Afro-Americans, and Mexican Americans--the Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups provides the first comprehensive and systematic review of the many peoples of this country. It should excite all Americans about their nation.

Informative and entertaining, this volume is an indispensable reference work for home, library and office. It establishes a foundation for the burgeoning field of ethnic studies; it will satisfy and stimulate the popular interest in ancestry and heritage. It is a guide to the history, culture, and distinctive characteristics of the more than 100 ethnic groups who live in the United States.

Each ethnic group is described in detail. The origins, history and present situation of the familiar as well as the virtually unknown are presented succinctly and objectively. Not only the immigrants and refugees who came voluntarily but also those already in the New World when the first Europeans arrived, those whose ancestors came involuntarily as slaves, and those who became part of the American population as a result of conquest or purchase and subsequent annexation figure in these pages. The English and the Estonians, the Germans and the Gypsies, the Swedes and the Serbs are interestingly juxtaposed. Even entries about relatively well-known groups offer new material and fresh interpretations. The articles on less well-known groups are the product of intensive research in primary sources; many provide the first scholarly discussion to appear in English. One hundred and twenty American and European contributors have been involved in this effort, writing either on individual groups or on broad themes relating to many.

The group entries are at the heart of the book, but it contains, in addition, a series of thematic essays that illuminate the key facets of ethnicity. Some of these are comparative; some philosophical; some historical; others focus on current policy issues or relate ethnicity to major subjects such as education, religion, and literature. American identity and Americanization, immigration policy and experience, and prejudice and discrimination in U.S. history are discussed at length. Several essays probe the complex interplay between assimilation and pluralism--perhaps the central theme in American history--and the complications of race and religion.

Numerous cross-references and brief identifications will aid the reader with unfamiliar terms and alternative group names. Eighty-seven maps, especially commissioned, show where different groups have originated. Annotated bibliographies contain suggestions for further reading and research. Appendix I, on methods of estimating the size of groups, leads the reader through a maze of conflicting statistics. Appendix II reproduces, in facsimile, hard-to-locate census and immigration materials, beginning with the first published report on the nativities of the population in 1850.

Contents

States
1
LeBreton
3
Mother Tongue
5
Holt
23
Jones
29
Nordic
42
Family characteristics of major immigrant
92
American IndiansEdward H Spicer
125
362
558
ItaliansHumbert S Nelli
559
Geographical distribution of Germanborn Amer
570
JapaneseHarry H L Kitano
571
Netherlands
580
Immigrants to the United States from Greece
592
JewsArthur A Goren
598
KoreansHyungchan
606

ArabsAlixa Naff
136
Oriental
142
ArmeniansRobert Mirak
149
Race
150
ScotchIrishMaldwyn A Jones
157
AssyriansArian B Ishaya and Eden Naby
171
UkrainiansPaul Robert Magocsi
184
Southern Canada
191
CarpathoRusyn Homelands
201
Language retention of four major American eth
215
South China
218
YankeesOscar Handlin
242
Czechoslovakia
262
AMERICAN INDIANS FEDERAL POLICY TOWARDEd
312
Percentages of New York City marriages outside
348
Filipino immigration to the United States 1966
362
ASSIMILATION AND PLURALISMHarold J Abramson
379
Gentile
404
GermansKathleen Neils Conzen
425
Germans from RussiaLa Vern J Rippley
440
Hispaniola
446
HaitiansMichel S Laguerre
449
HEALTH BELIEFS AND PRACTICESNoel J Chrisman
462
HungariansPaula Benkart
471
ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL CHARACTERIS
476
HISTORY OF U S POLICYWilliam
495
IndochineseMary Bowen Wright
513
Heer
521
IraniansJohn H Lorentz and John T Wertime
524
348
528
IrishPatrick J Blessing
545
Italian immigration to the United States 1820
547
LABORDavid Brody
618
476
632
Annual rate of immigration 18201970
639
LatviansEdgar Anderson
642
LithuaniansArūnas Ališauskas
676
LuxembourgersPaul Robert Magocsi
689
ManxAnn Orlov
697
MexicansCarlos E Cortés
719
MormonsDean L
731
India
762
POLITICS Edward R Kantowicz
812
PREJUDICEThomas F Pettigrew
829
PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION POLICY AGAINST
847
RELIGIONHarold J Abramson
875
Philippines
880
380
895
Religious affiliations of the population of
960
Resources and Research CENTERSEdward Kasinec
971
Hungary
982
Iceland
988
Afghanistan
991
Ireland
997
Percentage of population and relative regional
998
Italy
1011
1790 to 1970
1045
Africa
1047
Geographical distribution of the foreign born
1051
Country of origin of the foreign white stock
1059
Albania
1060
dence 1970
1068
1055
1075
Copyright

About the author (1980)

Stephan Thernstrom is Professor of History, Harvard University, and Director of the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History.

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