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Bridging Borders, Brokering Divides: Confronting the Limits of Cultural Assimilation1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 November 2010
Abstract
The three essays in this forum examine the ways in which individuals have sought to reconcile sociocultural differences between those at the fringes of American society and those at the center. Two concepts embody this effort. One is the bridge concept—the idea that those with dual identities would serve as links between the two sociocultural worlds. The other concept, that of the cultural broker, refers to someone who actively seeks to mediate the differences between the two groups. The essays in this cluster use the two concepts to analyze the ways in which individuals in three disparate places—the American West (California), a U.S. colony across the Pacific (the Philippines), and the American Southwest (New Mexico)—served as bridges and brokers in their efforts to negotiate the imbalance of power between dominant and subordinate groups.
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- Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2010
References
2 Szasz, Margaret Connell, ed., Between Indian and White Worlds: The Cultural Broker (Norman, OK, 1994), 3, 6, 17–18.Google Scholar
3 , Szasz, Between Indian and White Worlds, 3–6.Google Scholar
4 In addition to, Szasz, Between Indian and White WorldsGoogle Scholar, seeClifton, James A., ed., Being and Becoming Indian: Biographical Studies of North American Frontiers (Prospect Heights, IL, 1989)Google Scholar.
5 Park, Robert E., introduction to Stonequist, Everett V., The Marginal Man: A Study in Personality and Culture Conflict (1937; New York, 1961), xv.Google Scholar
6 , Stonequist, Marginal Man, 3.Google Scholar
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