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" The ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form. "
Nominations Before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Second Session, 103d ... - Page 126
by United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1963 - 1267 pages
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Latin American Urbanization

Charles Butterworth - 1981 - 266 pages
...them, it is true, something they had not been, but still something distinct and identifiable . . . The ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form. [Glazer and Moynihan 1963: 13-16; their emphasis] Attempting to...
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The Changing Agenda of Israeli Sociology: Theory, Ideology, and Identity

Uri Ram - 1995 - 256 pages
...maintenance of Old values and forms. (N. Cilazer & D. P. Moynihan. 1963:v-vi) They proclaimed that "[t]he ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form" and that "the ethnic groups .. . are also interest groups' (1963:Hi,...
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Cleveland: A Metropolitan Reader

William Dennis Keating, Norman Krumholz, David C. Perry - 1995 - 424 pages
...maintained an ethnic identity — no longer Italian but Italian- American, for example. This meant that "the ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form Ethnic groups, then, even after distinctive language, customs, and...
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Ethnicity: Anthropological Constructions

Marcus Banks - 1996 - 228 pages
...migrants left behind (1970: 16, 313). Early on in the introduction to the first edition they state: 'ft]he ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form' (1970: 16; emphasis in original). In terms of the positions outlined...
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Critical White Studies: Looking Behind the Mirror

Richard Delgado, Jean Stefancic - 1997 - 710 pages
...1930's, could not, regardless of culture and education, escape the low position of being "Jewish." The ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form. One could not predict from its first arrival what it might become...
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Membership and Morals: The Personal Uses of Pluralism in America

Nancy L. Rosenblum - 2000 - 450 pages
..."Token gestures" is disparaging and often inaccurate. "Vestigial" is misleading, too, if we think that "the ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form."37 The point is, white ethnic identity is frequently symbolic and...
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Philosophy of Education: Society and education

Paul Heywood Hirst, Patricia White - 1998 - 470 pages
...immigrant groups in different ways, to make them, it is true, something distinct and identiftable . . . The ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form.'" According to the authors, ethnic dillerences remain with us but...
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Divided Europeans: Understanding Ethnicities in Conflict

Tim Allen, John Eade - 1999 - 362 pages
...recognise that asserting an ethnic identity is a means of obtaining jobs and resources. They maintain that 'the ethnic group in American society became not a survival from the age of mass immigration but a new social form' (1970: 16). The members of an ethnic group are connected by ties...
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