Germania, U.S.A.: Social Change in New Ulm, MinnesotaU of Minnesota Press, 1966 - 188 pages |
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... First- generation Turners , by contrast , repudiated their Old World origin as a matter of policy . My intention is to show why the Turners founded Germania as an ethnic community in the first place and then proceeded to con- solidate ...
... First- generation Turners , by contrast , repudiated their Old World origin as a matter of policy . My intention is to show why the Turners founded Germania as an ethnic community in the first place and then proceeded to con- solidate ...
Page 6
... First occupying land only re- cently delivered from the wilderness by a group of German artisans and workmen from Chicago , the settlement would , in all probability , have failed had it not been that , less than three years later , a ...
... First occupying land only re- cently delivered from the wilderness by a group of German artisans and workmen from Chicago , the settlement would , in all probability , have failed had it not been that , less than three years later , a ...
Page 12
... first , mainly to court Jews , international financiers , and other well - to - do individuals ; later , to " the whole of Western and Central European Jewry " ) and of legislat- ing against the assimilation of the Jewish communities ...
... first , mainly to court Jews , international financiers , and other well - to - do individuals ; later , to " the whole of Western and Central European Jewry " ) and of legislat- ing against the assimilation of the Jewish communities ...
Page 13
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Contents
II A HISTORICAL AND DESCRIPTIVE ANALYSIS | 23 |
III CLASS STATUS AND POWER | 73 |
IV SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION | 139 |
APPENDIXES | 151 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 177 |
INDEX | 182 |
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Common terms and phrases
American Social Structure American society analysis Appendix Table assimilation scale Association Beinhorn Brown County capital worth cent Chicago Cincinnati class and status clubs compared comparisons cultural differences economic ethnic and status ethnic community formation Forty-Eighters Founder T Member German immigrants German Revolution German-American Germania Turners Gerth gymnastic Ibid influence Jahn land less living in Germania Martindale Max Weber Mean scale score Member N-T membership Minnesota minority munity N-T Non-Member N-T native nativists non-German North America occupational old families Old World organization Pfaender political position prestige Refugees religious response Revolution Roman Catholic sample second-generation Settler N-T Non-Member social class Sociology status community status group Stratification subcommunity tion Total town Turner Hall Turner societies Turner versus non-Turner Turnerbund Turners and non-Turners Turners of Germania Turnverein United University Press unskilled upper status group utopian wealth Weber Wittke wives Wright Mills York