The French melting pot : immigration, citizenship, and national identity
著者
書誌事項
The French melting pot : immigration, citizenship, and national identity
(Contradictions of modernity, v. 5)
University of Minnesota Press, c1996
- : hbk
- : pbk
- タイトル別名
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Creuset français
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
France is now a nation of immigrants. During the past thirty years, a large influx of immigrants from southern Europe and Africa has transformed French society to the point that one-third of the people currently living there have foreign-born parents or grandparents. An incisive comparison with the United States and other countries, this study looks at the issues behind France's denial of its immigrant past. Since the mid-1980s, immigration has surged to the forefront of public consciousness, leading to a growth of the nativist far right. Through a thematic exploration of the immigrant experience in France, Gerard Noiriel interweaves a discussion of past events with current issues. Among the topics discussed are why French historians and descendants of immigrants have traditionally sidestepped the immigration question; the importance and diversity of various waves of migration to France; the roles played by immigrants in the economic, social, and cultural development of the country; and the causes of periodic outbursts of xenophobia. Employing paradigms from history, sociology, and legal studies, the book also illuminates the cultural meaning of the American "melting pot".
目次
- The denial of memory
- the card and the code
- uprooted
- battered roots
- three crises
- the reconstruction of France
- conclusion - toward a sociohistory of national assimilation.
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