Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review

Nugent (Notre Dame) is a fine historian and a good storyteller. His latest book is a multilayered narrative of the movement of millions of Europeans to the Americas. Different from many other descriptions of the transatlantic passages, which tend to be focused on one side of the ocean (the lands of the senders) or the other (the countries of reception and resettlement), Crossings tears down what Frank Thistlewaite once called a saltwater curtain. Nugent moves—and moves his readers—back and forth across the Atlantic, describing the social and political conditions that pushed Europeans out of the Old World and the factors—not least of which was the promise of a better life—that pulled them into the New World, particularly to this country and to Argentina, Brazil, and Canada. Using a variety of social and demographic data by which to compare the several countries of immigration, the author challenges certain widely held assumptions about American [meaning US] exceptionalism. That is one of the subtexts in this interesting and informative work. Added bonuses include excellent maps, clearly presented tables, and a dozen classic photographs of the migrants at home in Europe, enroute to America, and in their new societies.Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations, 1870–1914

-- P. I. Rose * Smith College *

Table of Contents

Part I: The Atlantic Region and Its Population
1. What This Book Is About
2. The Atlantic Region in the Late Nineteenth Century
3. Fertility and Mortality
4. Migration: General Patterns and Motives

Part II: The European Donors
Introduction
5. Britain (Englant-Wales and Scotland)
6. Ireland
7. Scandinavia
8. The German Empire
9. Austria-Hungary and Russia, Jews and Poles
10. Italy
11. Spain and Portugal

Part III: The American Receivers
Introduction
12. Argentina
13. Brazil
14. Canada
15. United States of America
16. Modernization, Transition, and Exceptionalism

Notes, List of Works Cited and Consulted, Index

Crossings The Great Transatlantic Migrations

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    A Paperback / softback by Walter Nugent

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      View other formats and editions of Crossings The Great Transatlantic Migrations by Walter Nugent

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 22/12/1992
      ISBN13: 9780253209535, 978-0253209535
      ISBN10: 0253209536

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review

      Nugent (Notre Dame) is a fine historian and a good storyteller. His latest book is a multilayered narrative of the movement of millions of Europeans to the Americas. Different from many other descriptions of the transatlantic passages, which tend to be focused on one side of the ocean (the lands of the senders) or the other (the countries of reception and resettlement), Crossings tears down what Frank Thistlewaite once called a saltwater curtain. Nugent moves—and moves his readers—back and forth across the Atlantic, describing the social and political conditions that pushed Europeans out of the Old World and the factors—not least of which was the promise of a better life—that pulled them into the New World, particularly to this country and to Argentina, Brazil, and Canada. Using a variety of social and demographic data by which to compare the several countries of immigration, the author challenges certain widely held assumptions about American [meaning US] exceptionalism. That is one of the subtexts in this interesting and informative work. Added bonuses include excellent maps, clearly presented tables, and a dozen classic photographs of the migrants at home in Europe, enroute to America, and in their new societies.Crossings: The Great Transatlantic Migrations, 1870–1914

      -- P. I. Rose * Smith College *

      Table of Contents

      Part I: The Atlantic Region and Its Population
      1. What This Book Is About
      2. The Atlantic Region in the Late Nineteenth Century
      3. Fertility and Mortality
      4. Migration: General Patterns and Motives

      Part II: The European Donors
      Introduction
      5. Britain (Englant-Wales and Scotland)
      6. Ireland
      7. Scandinavia
      8. The German Empire
      9. Austria-Hungary and Russia, Jews and Poles
      10. Italy
      11. Spain and Portugal

      Part III: The American Receivers
      Introduction
      12. Argentina
      13. Brazil
      14. Canada
      15. United States of America
      16. Modernization, Transition, and Exceptionalism

      Notes, List of Works Cited and Consulted, Index

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