American
Ethnic History
Price: $29.95
Subtitle: Themes and Perspectives
Author: Jason
J. McDonald
Subject: History
/ American
Studies / Ethnic Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-8135-4228-7
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8135-4227-0
Pages: 272 pages
Publication Date: September 2007
View the Table of Contents
Description:
The United States, it is often said, is one of the most
ethnically diverse countries in the world. But what, precisely, do we
mean when we speak of “ethnic” groups or “ethnicity”? What is the
distinction, for example, between “race” and “ethnicity”? How do
various groups meld with the rest of
American society? Should we think in terms of assimilation,
integration, pluralism,
or some other relationship between ethnic groups and the mainstream? It
is
these and many other questions that Jason J. McDonald tackles in this
timely
and insightful book.
Chapters explore a range of topics, including how different ethnic
groups arrived in the United States—whether through violence and
coercion or willing immigration; the peculiar identification of Native
Americans as “ethnic,” despite the fact that they are indigenous to the
land; whether the American public’s attitudes toward and treatment of
difference has been consistent with the nation’s professed egalitarian
ideals; and how factors such as language, religion, class, gender, and
intermarriage play in either strengthening or weakening ethnic identity
and group solidarity.
An engaging and critical look at a term that remains stubbornly
ambiguous in both scholarly discussion and the vernacular, this book
makes an important contribution to the ongoing debates about
“difference” in American society.
About the Author:
Jason McDonald has taught U.S. History and American
Studies at various institutions, including Southampton University,
Winchester University, Brunel University, De Montfort University, and
Iowa State University.
Receive
special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $29.95
|