Natives and Strangers A Multicultural History of Americans

by ; ;
Edition: 4th
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-02-13
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
List Price: $42.61

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Summary

Now in its fourth edition, Natives and Strangers explores various aspects of minority group history, describing the impact America has had on minority peoples and cultures--and vice versa--and providing some understanding of the different conditions, conflicts, and contradictions that membersof American minority groups experienced. Beginning with the American Indian migration throughout the United States, the book discusses the variety of Indian cultures that Europeans encountered, incorporating the most recent literature on the subject. As in earlier editions, the fourth editionintegrates the experiences of racial, religious, and national minorities, explaining how their histories intertwined with the emergence of modern America. It also explores the far-reaching implications of recent immigration laws, presenting the controversy over multiculturalism in terms ofunderstanding American history. The authors conclude with reflections on where the nation stands today as an ethnically and racially diverse society. For the fourth edition, Dinnerstein, Nichols, and Reimers have made extensive revisions. While the previous editions used economic development to organize and tell the history of America's multicultural society, this text focuses much more on ethnic groups themselves, the roles the groups playedin American social developments, and the impact of economic changes on ethnicity. In addition, the authors include more information on the post-1960 period, particularly in regard to immigration and American Indians. They have expanded the discussion of the meaning of such terms as "white" and"people of color" and have updated all content--especially information on gender, Indian-white contact, and cultural history--by incorporating new findings from recent scholarship. This new edition contains extensive statistics culled from the recently available 2000 U.S. Census report; it featuresan explanation of what these latest figures indicate about America's ethnic makeup and revised tables and graphs that reflect this new data. Natives and Strangers, 4/e, is ideal for undergraduate courses covering immigration, American social history, and American ethnic groups.

Table of Contents

Preface vii
Colonial Foundations (1600--1780s)
1(24)
Coming of the English
2(2)
Indians and Anglo-Americans
4(4)
Attracting Settlers
8(2)
Development of Slavery and Racism
10(5)
European Minorities
15(4)
Colonial Social Structure
19(3)
Racial Minorities and the Revolution
22(3)
Forging a New Nation: The South (1776--1840s)
25(23)
A New Situation
25(1)
Territorial Growth
26(1)
Indian Relations
27(5)
Southern Antislavery Falters
32(2)
Southern Free Blacks
34(1)
Slavery in the Old South
35(10)
Poor Whites
45(3)
Forging a New Nation: The North (1776--1840s)
48(20)
Indian Relations
48(3)
Northern Antislavery Succeeds
51(1)
Immigration and Assimilation
52(2)
Fear of Foreigners
54(1)
The Movement West
55(2)
Urban and Industrial Growth
57(3)
Free Blacks in the North
60(2)
Renewal of Immigration
62(1)
The Mormons and Group Suppression
63(2)
Manifest Destiny
65(3)
A Surge of Immigrants (1840s--1880s)
68(25)
Settlement Patterns
70(2)
The Germans and the Irish
72(2)
The Coming of the Civil War
74(1)
Blacks and the Domestic Crisis
75(3)
Postwar Immigration
78(2)
Finding Employment
80(3)
Living Conditions
83(4)
Animosity toward Blacks and Foreigners
87(2)
Anti-Catholicism
89(2)
Political Nativism
91(2)
Burgeoning Industrialism and a Massive Movement of Peoples (1880s--1930s)
93(19)
Industrial Expansion
93(2)
Uprooted Peoples
95(3)
Immigrant Settlement
98(3)
The New Immigrants
101(7)
Black Migration North
108(4)
The Process of Adjustment (1880s--1930s)
112(33)
Wages and Working Conditions
112(9)
The Tenement Districts
121(2)
Voluntary Associations
123(2)
Black Associations
125(1)
Cultural and Recreational Activities
126(3)
The Churches and Parochial Education
129(2)
Public Education
131(2)
The Minority Press
133(1)
Maintaining Old World Ties
134(1)
Politics
135(3)
Social Mobility
138(4)
Assimilation
142(3)
Ethnic Groups and the Development of the West (1840s--1930s)
145(25)
The Mining Frontier
145(3)
The Chinese
148(2)
The Railroads
150(1)
Indian Wars and Reservations
151(7)
The Mormons
158(1)
Ranchers and Livestock Production
159(2)
Farmers
161(2)
The Japanese
163(1)
The Koreans
164(1)
The Mexicans
165(2)
Other Immigrants
167(3)
Ethnic Tensions and Conflicts (1880s--1945)
170(24)
Pseudoscientific Racism
171(2)
Triumph of Jim Crowism
173(2)
Treatment of Indians
175(6)
Attitudes Toward Asians
181(1)
Attitudes Toward Europeans
182(1)
Interethnic Conflict
183(1)
Religious Bigotry
184(2)
World War I
186(1)
Immigration Restriction
186(3)
The Mexican Experience
189(1)
Economic Depression and Increased Tensions
189(2)
``Concentration Camps U.S.A.''
191(3)
Movement, Mobility, and Cultural Adaptation (1941--2003)
194(21)
The Impact of World War II
194(2)
Southerners Move North
196(2)
Suburbs and the Rise of the Sun Belt and the West
198(1)
American Indian Migration
199(1)
Renewed European Immigration
200(6)
Prosperity and Mobility
206(3)
Retaining Ethnic Ties
209(3)
Ethnic Groups and Politics
212(3)
The Struggle for Equality (1945--2003)
215(30)
The Deprived Minorities
216(4)
Toward Civil Rights
220(4)
The Movement for Black Power
224(5)
The Hispanics
229(3)
The Asians
232(1)
The Indians
233(7)
The White Ethnic Groups
240(5)
A New Multiculturalism
245(34)
Beyond Europe: The Global Immigrants
245(5)
Mexicans
250(4)
The Cubans
254(2)
Other Latinos
256(4)
The New Asian Immigrants
260(7)
Near Easterners
267(4)
The West Indians
271(1)
New African Immigrants
272(1)
Renewed Anxiety Over Immigration
273(6)
Afterword 279(4)
Selected Bibliography 283(14)
Index 297

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