Irish America

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Oxford University Press, 1999 - 317페이지
Few writers on the Irish in America have looked beyond the nineteenth-century ethnic enclaves of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, or Chicago, or have asked how the notion of an Irish-American ethnic identity in contemporary America can be reconciled with five, six, or seven generations of intermarriage and assimilation over the last century and a half. This study, based on interviews with 500 people of Irish ancestry in Albany, New York, aims to discover in whatsenses and in what degrees the present-day descendants of nineteenth-century Irish immigrants possess distinctive social practices and ways of seeing the world, and raises questions about the social conditions in which ideas of Irishness have been created and re-created.

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저자 정보 (1999)

Adjunct Professor of Anthropology, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Long Island, New YorkResearch Professor of Anthropology, Union College, Schenectady, New York

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