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David T. Gleeson 
English Ethnicity and Culture in North America 

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Pokrywa David T. Gleeson: English Ethnicity and Culture in North America (ePUB)

Ten scholars examine English identity, what makes it distinct, and its role in shaping American culture

To many, English immigrants contributed nothing substantial to the varied palette of ethnicity in North America. While there is wide recognition of German American, French American, African American, and Native American cultures, discussion of English Americans as a distinct ethnic group is rare. Yet the historians writing in English Ethnicity and Culture in North America show that the English were clearly immigrants too in a strange land, adding their own hues to the American and Canadian characters.

In this collection, editor David T. Gleeson and other contributors explore some of the continued links between England, its people, and its culture with North America in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. These essays challenge the established view of the English having no 'ethnicity, ’ highlighting the vibrancy of the English and their culture in North America. The selections also challenge the prevailing notion of the English as 'invisible immigrants.’ Recognizing the English as a distinct ethnic group, similar to the Irish, Scots, and Germans, also has implications for understanding American identity by providing a clearer picture of how Americans often have defined themselves in the context of Old World cultural traditions.

Several contributors to English Ethnicity and Culture in North America track the English in North America from Episcopal pulpits to cricket fields and dance floors. For example Donald M. Mac Raild and Tanja Bueltmann explore the role of St. George societies before and after the American Revolution in asserting a separate English identity across class boundaries. In addition Kathryn Lamontagne looks at English ethnicity in the working-class culture and labor union activities of workers in Fall River, Massachusetts. Ultimately all the work included here challenges the idea of a coherent, comfortable Anglo-cultural mainstream and indicates the fluid and adaptable nature of what it meant and means to be English in North America.

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Contributors:

Dean Allen
Tanja Bueltmann
David T. Gleeson
Joseph Hardwick
Kathryn G. Lamontagne
Donald M. Mac Raild
James Mc Connel
Monika Smialkowska
Mike Sutton
William Van Vugt

O autorze

David T. Gleeson is a professor of American history at Northumbria University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, and a former director of the College of Charleston’s Carolina Lowcountry and Atlantic World program. He is the editor of The Irish in the Atlantic World, the coeditor of The Civil War as Global Conflict: Transnational Meanings of the American Civil War and Ambiguous Anniversary: The Bicentennial of the International Slave Trade Bans, and the author of The Green and the Gray: The Irish in the Confederate States of America.
Język Angielski ● Format EPUB ● Strony 258 ● ISBN 9781611177879 ● Rozmiar pliku 0.7 MB ● Redaktor David T. Gleeson ● Wydawca University of South Carolina Press ● Miasto Columbia ● Kraj US ● Opublikowany 2017 ● Do pobrania 24 miesięcy ● Waluta EUR ● ID 5376235 ● Ochrona przed kopiowaniem Adobe DRM
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