Synopses & Reviews
This book is the result of a four-year, in-depth study using social science methodology of those refugees who came as children or youths from Central Europe to the United States during the 1930s and 1940s, fleeing persecution from the National Socialist regime. This study examines their fates in their new country, their successes and tribulations.
Review
"This is an extraordinary book. As a child who fled Nazi persecution, I was fascinated to learn from this important study how the European culture of our origin (our cultural capital) merged with the freedom and academic opportunities of our newfound homeland, the United States, to give my generation of émigrés a distinctive set of capabilities, ambitions, and opportunities for a remarkably productive and enjoyable life despite the traumatic uprooting of our childhood. This beautifully documented analysis also illustrates two ways in which this infusion of émigrés differed from other waves of immigration. First, because of their youth, they sought to merge imperceptibly into American life. Second, because of their background, they could make a unique contribution to American culture.
This book is a must for both the general reader and the specialists in social sciences and history. Anyone interested in learning how different waves of immigration have forged American culture will find this book a fascinating intellectual experience."--Eric R. Kandel, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine
"A landmark, a contribution not only to the character of searing human experience, but to the transformation of American society. No one can write--or read--American history without it."--Daniel Bell, Henry Ford II Professor of Social Sciences, Emeritus, Harvard University
"This unique book--an inquiry in the nature and complexity of success—uses both wide-ranging interviews and quantitative methods to explore why so many of the children who fled Nazi persecution to the U.S. did so well in their careers."--Lore Segal, author of In Other People's Houses, and Fellow, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
"A fascinating story. Personal voices enliven the sophisticated research, making the subject accessible to lay persons as well as to academic readers."--Gerda Lerner, historian and author of Fireweed: A Political Autobiography
Review
"This is an extraordinary book. As a child who fled Nazi persecution, I was fascinated to learn from this important study how the European culture of our origin (our cultural capital) merged with the freedom and academic opportunities of our newfound homeland, the United States, to give my generation of émigrés a distinctive set of capabilities, ambitions, and opportunities for a remarkably productive and enjoyable life despite the traumatic uprooting of our childhood. This beautifully documented analysis also illustrates two ways in which this infusion of émigrés differed from other waves of immigration. First, because of their youth, they sought to merge imperceptibly into American life. Second, because of their background, they could make a unique contribution to American culture.
This book is a must for both the general reader and the specialists in social sciences and history. Anyone interested in learning how different waves of immigration have forged American culture will find this book a fascinating intellectual experience."--Eric R. Kandel, winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize for Physiology/Medicine
"A landmark, a contribution not only to the character of searing human experience, but to the transformation of American society. No one can write--or read--American history without it."--Daniel Bell, Henry Ford II Professor of Social Sciences, Emeritus, Harvard University
"This unique book--an inquiry in the nature and complexity of success--uses both wide-ranging interviews and quantitative methods to explore why so many of the children who fled Nazi persecution to the U.S. did so well in their careers."--Lore Segal, author of In Other People's Houses, and Fellow, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
"A fascinating story. Personal voices enliven the sophisticated research, making the subject accessible to lay persons as well as to academic readers."--Gerda Lerner, historian and author of Fireweed: A Political Autobiography
About the Author
Gerald Holton is Mallinckrodt Research Professor of Physics and Research Professor of the History of Science. Gerhard Sonnert is a sociologist of science and research associate in the Department of Physics, both at Harvard University.
Table of Contents
Introduction *
Part I: Exodus * Who Left and Why * Through the Eyes of Children * Destinations *
Part II: Advent * Situation in the United States and Official Policy * Organizations and Individuals Who Helped * Arriving in America *
Part III: Settling In * From Refugees to Americans * The Children's Experience *
Part IV: Socioeconomic Achievements * The Success of Former Refugees: An Analysis Using
Who's Who * The Big Picture: Representative Data about our Immigrant Cohort from the United States Census * Refugees from Central Europe and American-born Jews: A National Jewish Population Survey Analysis * Socioeconomic Status: Our Sample *
Part V: Partial Assimilation: Complex Identities * Language Acquisition * Elements of Distinctiveness * Collective Identities: Ethnic Option vs. Universalism *
Part VI: Ingredients of Success * General Conditions * Distinctiveness Advantage and Cultural Capital * Career Choice and Career Success * Transmission of Social Status * Other Effects: Family and Community Circumstances, Age at Arrival, Gender, and Identity * Success out of Adversity *
Part VII: Anguish--Privatized Cost: Socialized Benefits * Enduring Trauma * Anguish and Achievement * Individual Trajectories *
Part VIII: Epilogue: Lessons for Currents Refugees