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Book Review
Italian
Workers of the World: Labor Migration and the Formation of Multiethnic States. Ed. by Donna R.
Gabaccia and Fraser M. Ottanelli. (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2001.
xviii, 248 pp. $35.00, ISBN 0-252-02659-4.)
| In
their introduction, Donna R. Gabaccia and Fraser M. Ottanelli state that
roughly twenty million people left Italy between the French Revolution and
World War II. About half found work in Europe, almost a third traveled to
North America, and a quarter went to South America. Together they accounted
for 10 percent of the world's migrants. This diaspora constitutes an ideal
case study for anyone interested in how migration can transform identities and
influence other historical processes, such as the rise of multiethnic states
and the formation of social classes. These are the central concerns of this
well-integrated collection of essays. Drawing liberally on one another's
scholarship, the contributors and translators nimbly explore the consequences
of Italians' epochal comings and goings on both a grand and a human scale. |
1 |
| Gabaccia's
lead essay in part 1 sketches the interactions of upper-class political exiles
and lower-class economic migrants before and after Italy's unification in
1861 to argue that nationalist and republican ideals originated in those
far-flung communities. Fernando Devoto next dissects the conflict between
monarchists and republicans in Buenos Aires to expose how the two factions
vied for cultural authority through the construction of hospitals, mutual aid
societies, and newspapers. Several essays in the volume, notably Mirta Zaida
Lobato's study of La Patria, Argentina's Italian-language daily,
illustrate the importance of the immigrant press in shaping readers' sense
of themselves as workers and citizens. |
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