Despite the emphasis on ethnicity and crosscultural contact that permeates the New Western History, western historians have neglected the Jews of the American West. Often mislabeled as German ethnics because of their surnames or ignored altogether, Jews of the interior West in particular have been left out of the intellectual revolution sweeping the field. Their modern demographic distribution in coastal and urban areas has been mistaken for their historic presence, and their contribution to local and regional culture has been overlooked. As a result, the Jews of large urban areas in the West have received the vast majority of scholarly attention. In existing historical treatments, Jews of the interior West were transient people of commerce...
The second half of the twentieth century has been a time when American Jews have experienced a minim...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
When westward expansion began in the early nineteenth century, the Jewish population of the United S...
Despite the emphasis on ethnicity and crosscultural contact that permeates the New Western History, ...
“Probationary Settlers and Indigenous Peoples in the American West: American Jews and American India...
Review of: Jewish Life in the American West: Perspectives on Migration, Settlement, and Community. K...
Because the first Jews came to America in 1654, a stream of books and essays (p. xi) has been publ...
The purpose of this project was to call into question a commonly held belief in mainstream academia ...
Jews on the Frontier is a compelling account of the cultural and spiritual changes experienced by Am...
This book is one of ten brief volumes published in the Newcomers to a New Land series. These careful...
Ethnic Studies epistemologies have been central to the historicization and theorization of the US-Me...
No other ethnic group enjoyed the level of success, defined in terms of economic status and social a...
Though many historians have studied the wave of German Jewish immigration that occurred during the n...
This dissertation examines the ways Jewish communities on the Great Plains and in the Upper Midwest ...
For students of immigrant history, assimilation is an unavoidable and often problematic term. Prior ...
The second half of the twentieth century has been a time when American Jews have experienced a minim...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
When westward expansion began in the early nineteenth century, the Jewish population of the United S...
Despite the emphasis on ethnicity and crosscultural contact that permeates the New Western History, ...
“Probationary Settlers and Indigenous Peoples in the American West: American Jews and American India...
Review of: Jewish Life in the American West: Perspectives on Migration, Settlement, and Community. K...
Because the first Jews came to America in 1654, a stream of books and essays (p. xi) has been publ...
The purpose of this project was to call into question a commonly held belief in mainstream academia ...
Jews on the Frontier is a compelling account of the cultural and spiritual changes experienced by Am...
This book is one of ten brief volumes published in the Newcomers to a New Land series. These careful...
Ethnic Studies epistemologies have been central to the historicization and theorization of the US-Me...
No other ethnic group enjoyed the level of success, defined in terms of economic status and social a...
Though many historians have studied the wave of German Jewish immigration that occurred during the n...
This dissertation examines the ways Jewish communities on the Great Plains and in the Upper Midwest ...
For students of immigrant history, assimilation is an unavoidable and often problematic term. Prior ...
The second half of the twentieth century has been a time when American Jews have experienced a minim...
Between 1880 and 1924, 50,000 to 60,000 Levantine Jews immigrated to the United States from the Otto...
When westward expansion began in the early nineteenth century, the Jewish population of the United S...