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Clubbing Together Ethnicity Civility And Formal Sociability In The Scottish Diaspora To 1930 1st Edition Tanja Bueltmann

  • SKU: BELL-51602796
Clubbing Together Ethnicity Civility And Formal Sociability In The Scottish Diaspora To 1930 1st Edition Tanja Bueltmann
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Clubbing Together Ethnicity Civility And Formal Sociability In The Scottish Diaspora To 1930 1st Edition Tanja Bueltmann instant download after payment.

Publisher: Liverpool University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.16 MB
Pages: 288
Author: Tanja Bueltmann
ISBN: 9781781387436, 1781387435
Language: English
Year: 2014
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Clubbing Together Ethnicity Civility And Formal Sociability In The Scottish Diaspora To 1930 1st Edition Tanja Bueltmann by Tanja Bueltmann 9781781387436, 1781387435 instant download after payment.

Emigrants carried a rich array of associations with them to the new worlds in which they settled, often 'clubbing together' along ethnic lines shortly after first foot fall. Yet while a crucial element of immigrant community life, one of the richest examples, that of Scottish migrants, has received only patchy coverage. Moreover, no one has yet problematized Scottish associations, such as St Andrew's societies or Burns clubs, as a series of transnational connections that were deeply rooted in the civic life of their respective communities. This book provides the first global study to capture the wider relevance of the Scots' associationalism, arguing that associations and formal sociability are a key to explaining how migrants negotiated their ethnicity in the diaspora and connected to social structures in diverse settlements. Moving beyond the traditional nineteenth-century settler dominions, the book offers a unique comparative focus, bringing together Scotland's near diaspora in England and Ireland with that in North America, Africa, and Australasia to assess the evolution of Scottish ethnic associations, as well as their diverse roles as sites of memory and expressions of civility. The book reveals that the structures offered by Scottish associations engaged directly with the local, New World contexts, developing distinct characteristics that cannot be subsumed under one simplistic label--that of an overseas 'national society'. The book promotes understanding not only of Scottish ethnicity overseas, but also of how different types of ethnic associational activism made diaspora tangible.

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