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The Varieties of Ethnic Experience : Kinship, Class, and Gender among California Italian-Americans / Micaela Di Leonardo.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: The Anthropology of Contemporary IssuesPublisher: Ithaca, NY : Cornell University Press, [2018]Copyright date: ©1984Description: 1 online resource (262 p.)Content type:
Media type:
Carrier type:
ISBN:
  • 9781501721250
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 305.8/51/079461 19
Other classification:
  • online - DeGruyter
Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Diagrams and Tables -- Preface -- 1. "When a Person Speaks Sincere": The Setting and the Study -- 2. Italian Families, American Families: Immigration History and Settlement in California -- 3. "The Family is Soprattutto": Mobility Models, Kinship Realities, and Ethnic Ideology -- 4. "It's Kinda an Old Immigrant Thing": Economy, Family, and Collective Ethnic Identity -- 5. "Abbondanza Youself!": Abuse, Boundaries, and Ethnic Identity -- 6. "I Think God Helps Us": Women, Work, Ethnicity, and 178 Ideology -- 7. Kinship, Culture, and Economy in the American Context -- Appendix: A Comparative Test: Boston and San Francisco-Oakland Data -- References -- Index
Summary: Taking a novel anthropological approach to the issue of white ethnicity in the United States, this book challenges the model of uniform ethnic family and community culture, and argues for a reconsideration of the meaning of class, kinship, and gender in America's past and present. Micaela di Leonardo focuses on a group of Italian-American families who live in Northern California and who range widely in economic status. Combining the methods of participant-observation, oral history, and economic-historical research, she breaks decisively with the tradition of viewing white ethnicity solely as Eastern, urban, and working class.The author integrates lively narrative accounts with analysis to give a fresh interpretation of ethnic identity as both materially grounded and individually negotiated. She examines the ways in which different occupational experiences influence individual choice of family or community as the unit of collective ethnic identity, and she considers the boundaries at which individuals, particularly women, work out their personal ethnic identities. Her analysis illuminates the political meanings that the images of ethnic woman and family have taken on in popular discourse.A provocative study that sets the reflections of a broad range of Italian-Americans in the context of their varied life histories, this book provides an informed commentary on family, class, culture, and gender in American life.

Frontmatter -- Contents -- Diagrams and Tables -- Preface -- 1. "When a Person Speaks Sincere": The Setting and the Study -- 2. Italian Families, American Families: Immigration History and Settlement in California -- 3. "The Family is Soprattutto": Mobility Models, Kinship Realities, and Ethnic Ideology -- 4. "It's Kinda an Old Immigrant Thing": Economy, Family, and Collective Ethnic Identity -- 5. "Abbondanza Youself!": Abuse, Boundaries, and Ethnic Identity -- 6. "I Think God Helps Us": Women, Work, Ethnicity, and 178 Ideology -- 7. Kinship, Culture, and Economy in the American Context -- Appendix: A Comparative Test: Boston and San Francisco-Oakland Data -- References -- Index

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Taking a novel anthropological approach to the issue of white ethnicity in the United States, this book challenges the model of uniform ethnic family and community culture, and argues for a reconsideration of the meaning of class, kinship, and gender in America's past and present. Micaela di Leonardo focuses on a group of Italian-American families who live in Northern California and who range widely in economic status. Combining the methods of participant-observation, oral history, and economic-historical research, she breaks decisively with the tradition of viewing white ethnicity solely as Eastern, urban, and working class.The author integrates lively narrative accounts with analysis to give a fresh interpretation of ethnic identity as both materially grounded and individually negotiated. She examines the ways in which different occupational experiences influence individual choice of family or community as the unit of collective ethnic identity, and she considers the boundaries at which individuals, particularly women, work out their personal ethnic identities. Her analysis illuminates the political meanings that the images of ethnic woman and family have taken on in popular discourse.A provocative study that sets the reflections of a broad range of Italian-Americans in the context of their varied life histories, this book provides an informed commentary on family, class, culture, and gender in American life.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 26. Apr 2024)