Synopses & Reviews
In this collection, the editors seek to address the recent rebirth of interest in immigrant letters. As these letters are increasingly seen as key, rather than incidental, documents in the interpretations of gender, age, social class, and ethnicity/nationality, the scholars gathered here demonstrate a diversity of new approaches to their interpretation.
Review
"Well suited to genealogists and family historians with an interest in migration studies."--Family Chronicle
About the Author
Bruce S. Elliott is Professor of History, Carleton University.
David A. Gerber is Professor of History, University of Buffalo (SUNY).
Suzanne M. Sinke is Associate Professor of History, Florida State University.
Table of Contents
Introduction--Bruce S. Elliott, David A. Gerber, and Suzanne M. Sinke
* Part One: Limits and Opportunities * How Representative are Emigrant Letters? An Exploration of the German Case--Wolfgang Helbich and Walter D. Kamphoefner * The Limits of the Australian Emigrant Letter--Eric Richards * Marriage through the Mail: North American Correspondence
Marriage from Early Print To the Web--Suzanne Sinke * Part Two: Writing Conventions and Practices * Irish Emigration and the Art of Letter-Writing--David Fitzpatrick * The Importance of Correspondence in Lithuanian Immigrant Life--Daiva Markelis * Espistolary Communication between Migrant Workers and Their Families--Miguel Angel Vargas * Part Three: Silences and Censorship * Epistolary Masquerades: Acts of Deceiving and
Withholding in Immigrant Letters--David A. Gerber * Reading and Writing across the Borders of Dictatorship: Self-censorship and Emigrant Experience in Nazi and Stalinist Europe--Ann Goldberg * Part Four: Editorial Interventions * Polish-American Letters to the Editors of Ameryka-Echo, 1922-1969--Anna D. Jaroszynska-Kirchmann * Immigrant Letters in the Periodical Press in Late Nineteenth-Century Wales--William Jones * Part Five: Negotiations of Identity * Negotiating Space, Time, and Identity: The Hutton-Pellett
Letters and a British Child's Wartime Evacuation to Canada--Helen Brown * The Ukranian Government-in-Exile's Postal Network and the Construction of National Identity--Karen Lemiski * Part Six: Letters and the State * Immigrant Petition Letters in Early Modern Saxony--Alexander Schunka * Emigrant Correspondence with Russian Consulates in Montreal, Vancouver, and Halifax, 1899-1922--Vadim Kukushkin