The Uprooted: The Epic Story of the Great Migrations That Made the American PeopleUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 2002年2月20日 - 333 頁 Awarded the 1952 Pulitzer Prize in history, The Uprooted chronicles the common experiences of the millions of European immigrants who came to America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries—their fears, their hopes, their expectations. The New Yorker called it "strong stuff, handled in a masterly and quite moving way," while the New York Times suggested that "The Uprooted is history with a difference—the difference being its concerns with hearts and souls no less than an event." |
內容
Introduction | 3 |
Peasant Origins | 7 |
The Crossing | 34 |
Daily Bread | 58 |
New Worlds New Visions | 85 |
Religion as a Way of Life | 105 |
The Ghettos | 129 |
In Fellow Feeling | 152 |
Generations | 203 |
The Shock of Alienation | 231 |
Restriction | 255 |
Promises | 268 |
After Two Decades | 274 |
Encounters with Evidence | 300 |
Acknowledgments | 331 |
Democracy and Power | 180 |