Irish AmericaFew 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 what senses 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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1 | |
Colonists and Immigrants | 18 |
As Irish as any City in America | 51 |
The Past in the Present | 84 |
Over the Generations | 123 |
IrishCatholicDemocrat | 165 |
The Importance of being Irish | 203 |
The Wearing of the Green | 240 |
A Socioscape of Irish America | 268 |
301 | |
311 | |
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Albany Albany's American ancestors arrived asked associated background become born British brother brought Catholic cent century church common connected cultural Democratic descendants economic emigration English ethnic European evidence experience Famine farm father four German give given grandfather grandparents groups half Helen Hibernians idea identity important individuals Informant institutions interest interviews Ireland Irish ancestry Irish immigrants Irish-American Italian kind labour land later least less lived look majority marriage married means million mixed mother moved names neighbourhoods never North organization origins parade parents party past political population probably Protestant question reasons relatives religion religious remained sample sense settled side sisters social society St Patrick's Day Street things third thought tion traits United whole women York
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vii ÆäÀÌÁö - ... larger cities and suburbs, at least, they have remained ethnic because they have long practiced symbolic ethnicity." Consequently, there is good reason to believe that the same process will also take place among ethnics of the new immigration. Ethnic behavior, attitudes, and even identity are, however, determined not only by what goes on among the ethnics, but also by developments in the larger society, and especially by how that society will treat ethnics in the future; what costs it will levy...