Between Race and Ethnicity
ebook ∣ Cape Verdean American Immigrants, 1860-1965 · Statue of Liberty Ellis Island
By Marilyn Halter
Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
Marilyn Halter combines oral history with analyses of ships' records to chart the history and adaptation patterns of the Cape Verdean Americans. Though identifying themselves in ethnic terms, Cape Verdeans found that their African-European ancestry led their new society to view them as a racial group. Halter emphasizes racial and ethnic identity formation to show how Cape Verdeans set themselves apart from the African Americans while attempting to shrug off white society's exclusionary tactics. She also contrasts rural life on the bogs of Cape Cod with New Bedford's urban community to reveal the ways immigrants established their own social and religious groups as they strove to maintain their Crioulo customs.
|Preface: Of Marginal Natives and Multiple Identities xiAcknowledgments xvii
Introduction: The Cape Verdeans — All Shades, All Hues 1
1 Becoming Visible: A Demographic Profile 35
2 From Archipelago to America: A Sentimental Geography 67
3 Working the Bogs 99
4 Living — Just Enough for the City 131
5 Identity Matters: The Immigrant Children 163
Appendix 179
Bibliography 187
Index 209
Illustrations follow page 98|"An engaging study of a particularly intriguing and little-studied group with much to tell us about the construction of race and ethnicity and the dynamics of migration and community."—Sarah Deutsch, Clark University
|Marilyn Halter is a professor emerita of history at Boston University. She is the author of Shopping for Identity: The Marketing of Ethnicity and coauthor of African & American: West Africans in Post-Civil Rights America.