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British History - Religious Aspects, Jewish History - Eastern Europe, Jewish History - Europe - General & Miscellaneous, New York City - History, Immigrants, Regional British History - London, Regional Studies - Northeast & Middle Atlantic U.S., British H
East Side/East End by Selma Cantor Berrol β€” book cover

East Side/East End

by Selma Cantor Berrol
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Overview

This book is a comparative study of similar people in different environments at the same point in time. The six chapters discuss why eastern European Jews came to London and New York, the differences and similarities in the settlement process, the schools they found and the use they made of them, and the mobility they achieved. The study concludes that individual and societal conditions made it impossible for more than a small proportion of the generation that grew to maturity before the first world war to use schooling as a road to the middle class. In general, the Russian and Polish Jews who came to New York reached the middle class sooner than those who remained in London and thus can be said to have made the better choice.

Synopsis

This book is a comparative study of the eastern European Jews who settled in New York and those who settled in London around the turn of the twentieth century.

Booknews

Based on education and economic data from both sides of the Atlantic, Berrol (history, City U. of New York) argues that scholars have exaggerated the importance of public schools in the upward mobility of Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe. The general case was that only in the third generation would the Jews take advantage of secondary schooling. The main factor in social mobility was simply time; people in New York rose into the middle class slightly sooner than did those in London, but the patterns are similar. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

About the Author, Selma Cantor Berrol

SELMA BERROL is a Professor in the Department of History at Baruch College.

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Editorials

Booknews

Based on education and economic data from both sides of the Atlantic, Berrol (history, City U. of New York) argues that scholars have exaggerated the importance of public schools in the upward mobility of Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe. The general case was that only in the third generation would the Jews take advantage of secondary schooling. The main factor in social mobility was simply time; people in New York rose into the middle class slightly sooner than did those in London, but the patterns are similar. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1994
Publisher
Greenwood Publishing Group, Incorporated
Pages
176
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780275947729

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