American Mosaic: The Immigrant Experience in the Words of Those Who Lived It (Pittsburgh Series in Social & Labor History)

American Mosaic: The Immigrant Experience in the Words of Those Who Lived It (Pittsburgh Series in Social & Labor History)

by Charlotte Fox Zabusky (Author), Joan Morrison (Author)

Synopsis

This collection of oral histories strives to capture the drama and expanse of the American immigrant experience. American Mosaic is the result of five years of research and interviewing: it presents the recollections of 140 immigrants from six continents and 50 countries. The interviewees, who settled all over the United States, range in age from 17 to 101 and come from a variety of social and economic backgrounds - urban and rural, rich and poor, educated and illiterate. Most of the immigrants in this book are the unknown voices of history. Among them are a few well-known names - television commentator Alistair Cooke, physicist Edward Teller, ballerina Alexandra Danilova, actress Lynn Redgrave, baseball player Rennie Stennett, and others. Many of the ordinary immigrants have extraordinary stories to tell: Paul Maracek, who fled across the mountains from Czechoslovakia with the family diamonds baked in muffins; Su-Chu Hadley, the Chinese slave girl who found love in the arms of a gentle American soldier; John Daroubian, the Armenian boy who watched his family starve to death; Tanya Shimiewsky, the concentration camp survivor who still dreams of finding her daughter alive in Poland; Michael Kinney the Irish steelworker who thought he was down in Hell on his first day at work; Vo Thi Tam, one of the first Vietnamese boat people to arrive in America; and Demetrius Paleologas, the Greek dishwasher who became a millionaire. These stories of love, adventure, tragedy, and triumph depict the human side of immigration and reveal the ethnic heritage in the background of every American. An updated introductory chapter gives an overview of immigration history, a section on the legislation and a recapitualtion of recent trends. In his foreword, Oscar Handlin reflects on the book's contribution to the understanding of the American immigrant experience.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 480
Edition: 2nd ed.
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Published: 07 Oct 1993

ISBN 10: 0822954885
ISBN 13: 9780822954880

Media Reviews

A triumph. . . . Consistently fascinating and consistently rich in significant details about the great and complex story of immigration to the United States and adaptation to American life.

--New York Times Book Review


Powerful, dramatic, fascinating. . . . You have the feeling as you read across the extraordinary breadth of time, nationality and experience represented here that you are getting a grip on the real America: thrilling, depressing, frightening, gentle, crass, confusing, endearing, impersonal, vulgar, idealistic. In short, as diverse as the millions who have experienced and enriched it.

--Boston Globe


A powerful collection of oral histories which captures the immense drama and the amazing expanse of the American immigrant experience. Their vivid stories of love, adventure, tragedy, and triumph depict the human side immigration and reveal the rich ethnic heritage that lies in the background of every American.

--Western Pennsylvania Genealogical Society Quarterly

Author Bio
Joan Morrison, a frequent contributor on the social sciences to the New York Times among other publications, teaches at the New School for Social Research in New York City.

Charlotte Fox Zabusky supervises an English as a Second Language program for refugees.