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The Encounter between Jews and America in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 January 2012

Hasia Diner*
Affiliation:
New York University

Abstract

The period after 1870 through the middle of the 1920s, the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, coincided with the mass migration of Jews to the United States. Nearly three million Jews, primarily from eastern Europe, overwhelmed the numerically small Jewish community already resident in America. Of the Jews who left Europe in those years, approximately 85 percent opted for the United States, a society that took some of its basic characteristics from the particular developments of this transitional historical period. This essay focuses on five aspects of Gilded Age and Progressive Era America and their impact on the Jews. These features of American society both stimulated the mass migration and made possible a relatively harmonious, although complicated, integration. Those forces included the broader contours of immigration, the nation's obsession with race, its vast industrial and economic expansion, its valorization of religion, and its two-party system in which neither the Democrats or the Republicans had any stake in demonizing the growing number of Jewish voters.

Type
2011 SHGAPE Distinguished Historian Address
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2012

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References

1 This essay is derived in large measure from my book, The Jews of the United States: 1654–2000 (Berkeley, 2004)Google Scholar.

2 The most comprehensive work documenting American anti-Semitism is Dinnerstein, Leonard, Antisemitism in America (New York, 1994)Google Scholar.

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