The Jewish People in America: Four Volumes, Incomplete: Volume 2, a Time for Gathering: the Second Migration, 1820-1880; Volume 3, a Time for Building: the Third Migration, 1880-1920; Volume 4, a Time for Searching: Entering the Mainstream, 1920-1945;...
by Feingold, Henry L., Series Ed, ; Hasia R. Diner, Gerald Sorin, Edward S. Shapiro
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Near Fine in very good + jacket. Second printing, 1992. Four volumes. 8vos, hardcover in dust jackets, approx. 300 pp each. Illustrated in b & w. Books are Near Fine, pages are clean and unmarked. Dust jackets are Very Good+, with sunning to spines and on Vol. 5, to edges of front panel.
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Isaac Wolfe Bernheim (cover illustration) Very good. No dust jacket issued. xvii, [3], 313, [3] pages. Illustrated front cover. Minor wear and soiling to cover. This is one of The Jewish People in America series, sponsored by the American Jewish Historical Society. Series Editor's Foreword. Illustrations. Notes. A Note on Sources. Index. Hasia R. Diner is an American historian. Diner is the Paul S. and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish History; Professor of Hebrew and Judaic Studies, History; Director of the Goldstein-Goren Center for American Jewish History at New York University and Interim Director of Glucksman Ireland House NYU. Diner received a B.A. in 1968 from the University of Wisconsin. She went on to earn an M.A. in 1970 from the University of Chicago; and a Ph.D. in 1975 from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Her Ph.D. dissertation "In the Almost Promised Land: Jewish Leaders and Blacks, 1915-1935" was directed by Professor Leo Schelbert. In 2002 she published Her Works Praise Her: A History of Jewish Women in America from Colonial Times to the Present. In 2009 she published We Remember with Reverence and Love: American Jews and the Myth of Silence after the Holocaust, 1945-1962. According to Adam Kirsch, the book "drive(s) a stake, once and for all, through the heart of a historical falsehood that has proved remarkably durable. This is the notion that, as Diner's subtitle has it, American Jews were initially 'silent' about the Holocaust-that the greatest catastrophe in Jewish history was somehow swept under the rug of American Jewry's collective consciousness. Between 1820 and 1880, European Jews arrived in the United States in ever greater numbers. While later Jewish immigrants would criticize their "rush" to assimilation, the Jews of this period created the institutions that continue to shape Jewish life in America. In A Time for Gathering, Hasia Diner describes this "second wave" of Jewish migration.
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