EBOOK

From All Points

America's Immigrant West, 1870s-1952

Elliott Robert BarkanSeries: American West in the Twentieth Century
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Pages
624
Year
2007
Language
English

About

At a time when immigration policy is the subject of heated debate, this book makes clear that the true wealth of America is in the diversity of its peoples. By the end of the 20th century the American West was home to nearly half of America's immigrant population, including Asians and Armenians, Germans and Greeks, Mexicans, Italians, Swedes, Basques, and others. This book tells their rich and complex story-of adaptation and isolation, maintaining and mixing traditions, and an ongoing ebb and flow of movement, assimilation, and replenishment. These immigrants and their children built communities, added to the region's culture, and contended with discrimination and the lure of Americanization. The mark of the outsider, the alien, the nonwhite passed from group to group, even as the complexion of the region changed. The region welcomed, then excluded, immigrants, in restless waves of need and nativism that continue to this day.

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Reviews

"An engaging and complex work, From All Points makes a persuasive case for the centrality of immigrants to the growth of the West."
Frank Van Nuys, Western Historical Quarterly 39, Autumn 2008
"...important demographic profiles, and on a meticulous reading of the vast secondary literature that is so masterfully synthesized here."
Arnoldo De Leon, Register of Kentucky Historical Society, Summer 2007
"Elliott Robert Barkan comes ideally equipped for the task of this book... By including vignettes of individual life stories, he manages to capture both the forest and the trees of the immigrant experience, and puts a human face on many of the general tendencies and developments he describes."
H-Net Reviews, October, 2009

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