Translating America: An Ethnic Press and Popular Culture, 1890-1920

Translating America: An Ethnic Press and Popular Culture, 1890-1920

by Peter Conolly-Smith
Translating America: An Ethnic Press and Popular Culture, 1890-1920

Translating America: An Ethnic Press and Popular Culture, 1890-1920

by Peter Conolly-Smith

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Overview

At the turn of the century, New York City's Germans constituted a culturally and politically dynamic community, with a population 600,000 strong. Yet fifty years later, traces of its culture had all but disappeared. What happened? The conventional interpretation has been that, in the face of persecution and repression during World War I, German immigrants quickly gave up their own culture and assimilated into American mainstream life.

But in Translating America, Peter Conolly-Smith offers a radically different analysis. He argues that German immigrants became German-Americans not out of fear, but instead through their participation in the emerging forms of pop culture. Drawing from German and English newspapers, editorials, comic strips, silent movies, and popular plays, he reveals that German culture did not disappear overnight, but instead merged with new forms of American popular culture before the outbreak of the war. Vaudeville theaters, D.W. Griffith movies, John Philip Sousa tunes, and even baseball games all contributed to German immigrants' willing transformation into Americans.

Translating America tackles one of the thorniest questions in American history: How do immigrants assimilate into, and transform, American culture?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781588342874
Publisher: Smithsonian Institution Press
Publication date: 07/06/2010
Pages: 424
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Peter Conolly-Smith holds a Ph.D. in American studies from Yale University. He is an assistant professor of history at Union County College in New Jersey and lives in New York City.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvii
Introduction: "Erasing the Hyphen" with Image and Word1
I.Text and Context: New York's German-American Community and Its Daily Press, from the Nineteenth Century to the Nineteen Teens
1.(German-)American Hieroglyphics: The Emergence of an Immigrant Culture and an Ethnic Stereotype25
2.Competing Voices and Diasporic Imagi-Nations: The New Yorker Staats-Zeitung and the New Yorker Volkszeitung54
3.A New Voice for a New Century: William Randolph Hearst's New Yorker Morgen Journal77
II.Divisive Issues: German America and the Transformation of the Host Society, 1910-1916
4."Sex O'Clock in America": Engendering a Debate on Fashion, Suffrage, and Charity105
5.Problem Plays, Pageant, and Parody: American and German-American Theater on the Eve of the European War132
6.Audiences, Spectators, and the Limits of (In)tolerance: German America at the Movies164
III.Culture and Politics: The Decline of Kultur and the Translation of German America, 1915-1920
7.Embattled Muse: German Song, Symphony, and Opera during World War I193
8.Wartime Drama: Christians, Philipp, and the Decline of the German-Language Stage217
9.The Translated Community243
Epilogue and Coda: The Armistice and Beyond: Winners, Losers, and the Very Last Laugh271
Notes287
Bibliography389
Index403
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