People in transit

Titel: People in transit : German migrations in comparative perspective, 1820-1930 / ed. by Dirk Hoerder ... German Historical Institute, Washington, D.C.
Beteiligt:
Körperschaft:
Veröffentlicht: Cambridge ˜[u.a.]œ : Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995
Umfang: XV, 433 S. : graph. Darst., Kt.
Format: Buch
Sprache: Englisch
Schriftenreihe/
mehrbändiges Werk:
Publications of the German Historical Institute
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Schlagworte:
ISBN: 0521474124
Buchumschlag
X
  • Part I
  • Continuity and Complexity: Migrations from East Elbian Germany and Galician Poland
  • 1
  • German emigration research, north, south, and east: findings, methods, and open questions
  • 2
  • Nineteenth-century continental and transoceanic emigrations: a history of East
  • 3
  • Overseas emigration from Mecklenburg-Strelitz: the geographic and social contexts
  • 4
  • Emigration from Regierungsbezirk Frankfurt/Oder, 1815-1893
  • 5
  • Preserving or transforming role?: Migrants and Polish territories in the era of mass migrations
  • Part II
  • Internal German Migrations and In-Migrations
  • 6
  • Traveling workers and the German labor movement
  • 7
  • Migration in Duisberg, 1821-1914
  • 8
  • In-migration and emigration in an area of heavy industry: the example of Georgsmarienhütte, 1856-1870
  • 9
  • Foreign workers in and around Bremen, 1884-1918
  • Part III
  • Women's Migration: Labor and Marriage Markets
  • 10
  • The international marriage market: theoretical and historical perspectives
  • 11
  • Making service serve themselves: immigrant women and domestic service in North America, 1850-1920
  • 12
  • German domestic servants in America, 1850-1914: a new look at German immigrant women's experience
  • 13
  • Acculturation of immigrant women in Chicago at the turn of the twentieth century
  • Part IV
  • Acculturation in and Return from the United States
  • 14
  • Communicating the old and the new: German immigrant women and their press in comparative perspective around 1900
  • 15
  • Return migration to an urban center: the example of Bremen, 1850-1914
  • 16
  • Migration, ethnicity, and working class formation: Passaic, New Jersey, 1889-1926
  • 17
  • Changing gender roles and emigration: the example of German Jewish women after 1933 and their emigration to the United States, 1933-1945
  • Conclusion
  • migration past and present: the German experience
  • lBibliographic essay
  • Research on the German migrations, 1820s to 1830s: a report on the state of German scholarship