Germania, U.S.A.: Social Change in New Ulm, MinnesotaU of Minnesota Press, 1966 - 188 pages |
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... religious freedom and the economic security denied them in their fatherland . Hence Germania is the product of nineteenth - century forces far removed from the realities of life on the American frontier . Who could have imagined that ...
... religious freedom and the economic security denied them in their fatherland . Hence Germania is the product of nineteenth - century forces far removed from the realities of life on the American frontier . Who could have imagined that ...
Page 5
... religious oppression , by and large they were not inclined to con- struct models of ideal societies that bore no relation to reality . Furthermore , they did not possess the frontiersman's disposition to break all ties with traditional ...
... religious oppression , by and large they were not inclined to con- struct models of ideal societies that bore no relation to reality . Furthermore , they did not possess the frontiersman's disposition to break all ties with traditional ...
Page 8
... religion , a common history , customs and laws . " 7 Henry Sumner Maine , Ancient Law ( New York : Henry Holt , 1906 ) . 9 Community and Society , trans , by Charles P. Loomis ( East Lansing : Michigan State University Press , 1957 ) ...
... religion , a common history , customs and laws . " 7 Henry Sumner Maine , Ancient Law ( New York : Henry Holt , 1906 ) . 9 Community and Society , trans , by Charles P. Loomis ( East Lansing : Michigan State University Press , 1957 ) ...
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... maintains semisecret associations , and organizes its own social , religious , economic , and ( in the case of the Jewish ethnic community ) educa- here , it raises the further question as to how 12 THEORY AND METHOD.
... maintains semisecret associations , and organizes its own social , religious , economic , and ( in the case of the Jewish ethnic community ) educa- here , it raises the further question as to how 12 THEORY AND METHOD.
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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