Front cover image for Opposite Poles : immigrants and ethnics in Polish Chicago, 1976-1990

Opposite Poles : immigrants and ethnics in Polish Chicago, 1976-1990

Mary Patrice Erdmans (Author)
Opposite Poles presents a fascinating and complex portrait of ethnic life in America. The focus is Chicago Polonia, the largest Polish community outside of Warsaw. During the 1980s a new cohort of Polish immigrants from communist Poland, including many refugees from the Solidarity movement, joined the POlish American ethnics already settled in Chicago. The two groups shared an ancestral homeland, social space in Chicago, and the common goal of wanting to see Poland become an independent noncommunist nation. These common factors made the groups believe they ought to work together and help each other; but they were more often at opposite poles. Mary Erdmans's dramatic account of intracommunity conflict in Chicago Polonia demonstrates the importance of distinguishing between immigrants and ethnics in American ethnic studies. She shows that while common ancestral heritage creates the potential for ethnic allegiance, it is not a sufficient condition for collective action. -- From back cover
Print Book, English, 1998
Pennsylvania State University Press, University Park, Pennsylvania, 1998
History
x, 267 pages ; 24 cm
9780271017358, 9780271017365, 027101735X, 0271017368
37245940
Polishness in twentieth-century America
Immigrants, Wakacjusze, and refugees
Culture and the discourse of Communism
A solidarity of differences
Power, competition, and ownership
Identity and national loyalty: the 1989 election
Conclusion: migrations and generation