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Italian American women --- Italian Americans --- Ethnology --- Italians --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- Societies and clubs. --- Social conditions. --- Social life and customs. --- Chicago (Ill.)
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Italian American women --- Storytellers --- Tales --- Italian Americans --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- Raconteurs --- Tellers of stories --- Entertainers --- Ethnology --- Italians --- Folklore. --- Todesco, Clementina.
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"My American ancestral Italian village was in Waterbury, Connecticut." In this sentence, Joanna Clapps Herman raises the central question of this book: To what extent can a person born outside of Italy be considered Italian? The granddaughter of Italian immigrants who arrived in the United States in the early 1900s, Herman takes a complicated and nuanced look at the question of to whom and to which culture she ultimately belongs. Sometimes the Italian part of her identity--her Italianità--feels so aboriginal as to be inchoate, unexpressible. Sometimes it finds its expression in the rhythms of daily life. Sometimes it is embraced and enhanced; at others, it feels attenuated. "If, like me," Herman writes, "you are from one of Italy's overseas colonies, at least some of this Italianità will be in your skin, bones, and heart: other pieces have to be understood, considered, called to ourselves through study, travel, reading. How do we know which pieces are which?"--Provided by publisher.
Italian Americans --- Italian American women --- Ethnic identity. --- Social life and customs. --- Herman, Joanna Clapps. --- Ethnology --- Italians --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- Waterbury (Conn.)
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"As the child of children of immigrants, Louise DeSalvo was at first reluctant to write about her truths. Her abusive father, her sister's suicide, her illness. In this stunning collection of her captivating and frank essays on her life and her Italian-American culture, Louise DeSalvo centers on her beginnings, reframing and revising her acclaimed memoiristic essays, pieces that were the seeds of longer collections, to reveal her true power as a memoirist: the ability to dig ever deeper for personal and political truths that illuminate what it means to be a woman, a child of Italian immigrants, a writer, and a scholar"--
Critics --- English literature --- Authors, American --- Italian American women --- Italian American families --- Appreciation --- DeSalvo, Louise A., --- Family. --- Families, Italian American --- Italian Americans --- Families --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- American authors
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Documents the rich history of Italian American working women in Connecticut, including the crucial role they played in union organizing.
Italian American families --- Italian American women --- Italian Americans --- Women --- Human females --- Wimmin --- Woman --- Womon --- Womyn --- Females --- Human beings --- Femininity --- Ethnology --- Italians --- Women, Italian American --- Families, Italian American --- Families --- History. --- Connecticut --- Connecticutt --- State of Connecticut --- New-Haven Colony --- Social conditions
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"Mary Jo Bona reconstructs the literary history and examines the narrative techniques of eight Italian American women's novels from 1940 to the present. Largely neglected until recently, these women's family narratives compel a reconsideration of what it means to be a woman and an ethnic in America."--Jacket.
American literature
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Women and literature
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Italian American women
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Italian Americans in literature.
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Italian Americans in literature
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English
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Languages & Literatures
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American Literature
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Women, Italian American
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Women
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Literature
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English literature
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Agrarians (Group of writers)
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Italian American authors
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History and criticism.
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Women authors
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History.
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Intellectual life.
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Italian influences.
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History and criticism
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History
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Intellectual life
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Italian influences
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Italy
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In literature.
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Growing up an Italian-American in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of New York city, Marianna De Marco longed for college, culture, and upward mobility. Her daydreams circled around WASP (White Anglo Saxon Protestant) heroes on television-like Robin Hood and the Cartwright family-but in Brooklyn she never encountered any. So she associated moving up with Ocean Parkway, a street that divides the working-class Italian neighborhood where she was born from the middle-class Jewish neighborhood into which she married. This book is Torgovnick's unflinching account of crossing cultural boundaries in American life, of what it means to be an Italian American woman who became a scholar and literary critic. Included are autobiographical moments interwoven with engrossing interpretations of American cultural icons from Dr. Dolittle to Lionel Trilling, The Godfather to Camille Paglia. Her experiences allow her to probe the cultural tensions in America caused by competing ideas of individuality and community, upward mobility and ethnic loyalty, acquisitiveness and spirituality.
American literature --- Italian Americans --- Italian American women --- Italian Americans in literature. --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- Ethnology --- Italians --- Italian American authors --- History and criticism. --- Social life and customs. --- Italian influences. --- Intellectual life. --- Torgovnick, Marianna, --- Bensonhurst (New York, N.Y.) --- neighborhood, locale, regional, growing up, coming of age, goals, biography, autobiography, true story, new york, city, urban, college, culture, mobility, class, classism, social, wasp, white, anglo saxon, protestant, brooklyn, italian, working, jewish, marriage, cultural, boundaries, scholar, literary, critic, influential, america, american, united states.
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Community life --- Fish canneries --- Fishers --- Italian American families --- Women immigrants --- Italian American women --- Associations, institutions, etc. --- Human ecology --- Canneries --- Fishery processing plants --- Anglers --- Fishermen --- Persons --- Families, Italian American --- Italian Americans --- Families --- Immigrant women --- Immigrants --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- History --- Social conditions --- Monterey (Calif.) --- Sicily (Italy) --- Regione siciliana (Italy) --- Sikelia (Italy) --- Sycylia (Italy) --- Królestwo Sycylii (Italy) --- Sicilia (Italy) --- Sicile (Italy) --- Sicilian Regional Government --- Sicily --- Ṣiqillīyah (Italy) --- Sitsilyah (Italy) --- Sicily (Italy : Territory under Allied occupation, 1943-1947) --- Naples (Kingdom) --- City of Monterey (Calif.) --- Monterey, Calif. --- Monterrey (Calif.) --- Social life and customs --- Emigration and immigration --- Sports persons --- Sportspersons
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Offers a comparative historical study of women's migration from Russia and Italy to New York at the turn of the 20th century. Taking an interdisciplinary and global perspective, the book examines the causes and consequences of women's migration, contrasting the adaptation experiences of Jewish and Italian women.
Italian American women --- Jewish women --- Women immigrants --- Women, Italian American --- Women --- Women, Jewish --- Immigrant women --- Immigrants --- History. --- New York (N.Y.) --- New York (City) --- Ni︠u︡ Ĭork (N.Y.) --- Novi Jork (N.Y.) --- Nova Iorque (N.Y.) --- Nyu-Yorḳ (N.Y.) --- Nueva York (N.Y.) --- Nu Yorḳ (N.Y.) --- Nyuyok (N.Y.) --- Nuyorḳ (N.Y.) --- New York City (N.Y.) --- Niyū Yūrk (N.Y.) --- Niyūyūrk (N.Y.) --- Niu-yüeh (N.Y.) --- Nowy Jork (N.Y.) --- City of New York (N.Y.) --- New York Stad (N.Y.) --- نيويورك (N.Y.) --- Táva Nueva York (N.Y.) --- Nyu-York Şähäri (N.Y.) --- Нью-Йорк (N.Y.) --- Горад Нью-Ёрк (N.Y.) --- Horad Nʹi︠u︡-I︠O︡rk (N.Y.) --- Нью-Ёрк (N.Y.) --- Ню Йорк (N.Y.) --- Nova York (N.Y.) --- Çĕнĕ Йорк (N.Y.) --- Śĕnĕ Ĭork (N.Y.) --- Dakbayan sa New York (N.Y.) --- Dinas Efrog Newydd (N.Y.) --- Efrog Newydd (N.Y.) --- Nei Yarrick Schtadt (N.Y.) --- Nei Yarrick (N.Y.) --- Νέα Υόρκη (N.Y.) --- Nea Yorkē (N.Y.) --- Ciudad de Nueva York (N.Y.) --- Novjorko (N.Y.) --- Nouvelle York (N.Y.) --- Nua-Eabhrac (N.Y.) --- Cathair Nua-Eabhrac (N.Y.) --- Caayr York Noa (N.Y.) --- York Noa (N.Y.) --- Eabhraig Nuadh (N.Y.) --- Baile Eabhraig Nuadh (N.Y.) --- Нью Йорк балhсн (N.Y.) --- Nʹi︠u︡ Ĭork balḣsn (N.Y.) --- Шин Йорк (N.Y.) --- Shin Ĭork (N.Y.) --- 뉴욕 (N.Y.) --- Lungsod ng New York (N.Y.) --- Tchiaq York Iniqpak (N.Y.) --- Tchiaq York (N.Y.) --- New York-borg (N.Y.) --- Nuova York (N.Y.) --- ניו יורק (N.Y.) --- New York Lakanbalen (N.Y.) --- Lakanabalen ning New York (N.Y.) --- Evrek Nowydh (N.Y.) --- Nouyòk (N.Y.) --- Bajarê New Yorkê (N.Y.) --- New Yorkê (N.Y.) --- Mueva York (N.Y.) --- Sivdad de Mueva York (N.Y.) --- סיבֿדאד די מואיבֿה יורק (N.Y.) --- Sivdad de Muevah Yorḳ (N.Y.) --- מואיבֿה יורק (N.Y.) --- Muevah Yorḳ (N.Y.) --- Novum Eboracum (N.Y.) --- Neo-Eboracum (N.Y.) --- Civitas Novi Eboraci (N.Y.) --- Ņujorka (N.Y.) --- Niujorkas (N.Y.) --- Niujorko miestas (N.Y.) --- Niuiork (N.Y.) --- Њујорк (N.Y.) --- Njujork (N.Y.) --- Bandar Raya New York (N.Y.) --- Bandaraya New York (N.Y.) --- Nuoba Iorque (N.Y.) --- Нью-Йорк хот (N.Y.) --- Nʹi︠u︡-Ĭork khot (N.Y.) --- Āltepētl Yancuīc York (N.Y.) --- Niej-York (N.Y.) --- ニューヨーク (N.Y.) --- Nyū Yōku (N.Y.) --- ニューヨーク市 (N.Y.) --- Nyū Yōku-shi (N.Y.) --- NYC (N.Y.) --- N.Y.C. (N.Y.) --- Emigration and immigration --- Jewish religion --- Sociology of culture --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Sociology of work --- Demography --- Italy --- United States --- United States of America --- Race --- Gender --- Judaism --- Migration --- Labour --- Book --- Turn of the century
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