360 Pages
by
Routledge
First Published in 1991. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Foreword; Neil Betten, “Polish American Steelworkers: Americanization Through Industry and Labor,” Polish American Studies, 33:2 (Autumn 1976), 31-42; John J. Bukowczyk, “The Transformation of Working-Class Ethnicity: Corporate Control, Americanization, and the Polish Immigrant Middle Class in Bayonne, New Jersey, 1915-1925,” Labor History, 25:1 (Winter 1984), 53-82; Robert L. Buroker, “From Voluntary Association to Welfare State: The Illinois Immigrants’ Protective League, 1908-1926 ” Journal of American History, 58:3 (December 1971), 643-660; Robert A. Carlson, “Americanization as an Early Twentieth-Century Adult Education Movement,” History of Education Quarterly, 10:4 (Winter 1970),440-464; Reinhard R. Doerries, “The Americanizing of the German Immigrant: A Chapter from U.S. Social History,” American Studies, 23:1 (1978); Mario T. Garcia, “Americanization and the Mexican Immigrant, 1880-1930,” Journal of Ethnic Studies, 6:2 (Summer 1978), 19-34; Philip Gleason, “Americans All: World War II and the Shaping of American Identity,” Review of Politics, 43:4 (October 1981), 483-518; Gerd Korman, “Americanization at the Factory Gate,” Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 18 (1965), 396-419; Rivka Lissak, “Liberal Progressives and ‘New Immigrants’: The Immigrants’ Protective League of Chicago, 1908-1919,” Studies in American Civilization, XXXII (1987), 79-103; Rivka Lissak, “Myth and Reality: The Pattern of Relationship Between the Hull House Circle and the ‘New Immigrants’ on Chicago’s West Side, 1890-1919,” Journal of American Ethnic History, 2:2 (Spring 1983), 21-50; John F. McClymer, “The Federal Government and the Americanization Movement, 1915-1924,” Prologue: The Journal of the National Archives,10 (Spring 1978), 22-41; Stephen Meyer, “Adapting the Immigrant to the Line: Americanization in the Ford Factory, 1914-1921,” Journal of Social History, 14 (1980); Raymond A. Mohl and Neil Betten, “Ethnic Adjustment in the Industrial City: The International Institute of Gary, 1919-1940,” International Migration Review, 6:4 (Winter 1972), 361-376; Raymond A. Mohl and Neil Betten, “Paternalism and Pluralism: Immigrants and Social Welfare in Gary, Indiana, 1906-1940,” American Studies,15 (Spring 1974), 5-30; Ralph E. Pumphrey, “Compassion and Protection: Dual Motivations in Social Welfare,” Social Service Review, 33:1 (March 1959), 21-29; Jonathan D. Sama, “The American Jewish Response to Nineteenth-Century Christian Missions,” Journal of American History, 68:1 (June 1981), 35-51.
Biography
George E. Pozzetta






