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Immigrants Against the State

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From the 1880s through the 1940s, tens of thousands of first- and second-generation immigrants embraced the anarchist cause after arriving on American shores. Kenyon Zimmer explores why these migrants turned to anarchism and how their adoption of its ideology shaped their identities, experiences, and actions. Zimmer focuses on Italians and Eastern European Jews in San Francisco, New York City, and Paterson, New Jersey. Tracing the movement’s changing fortunes from the pre–World War I era through the Spanish Civil War, Zimmer argues that anarchists, opposed to both American and Old World nationalism, severed all attachments to their nations of origin but also resisted assimilation into their host society. Their radical cosmopolitan outlook and identity instead embraced diversity and extended solidarity across national, ethnic, and racial divides. Though in the end unable to withstand the onslaught of Americanism and other nationalisms, the movement nonetheless provided an important example of a transnational collective identity delinked from the nation-state and racial hierarchies.

Artikelnummer: 28518 Categorie: Tags: ,
Subtitel: Yiddish and Italian Anarchism in America
Auteur: Zimmer, Kenyon
Jaar: 2015
ISBN: 9780252080920
Pagina's: 304
Taal: English
Uitgever: University of Illinois Press
Uitgever stad: Chicago
Verschijningsdatum:
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