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Foreign and Female: Immigrant Women in America, 1840-1930
Foreign and Female Immigrant Women in America 18401930 Author:Doris Weatherford As portrayed by Florida-based political consultant Weatherford in this comprehensive survey, immigrant European women were at once vulnerable and resilient. While most of them accompanied male relatives to America, many made the journey alone as unmarried women, or with their children to rejoin husbands after prolonged separations. Although the ... more »majority of these women were uneducated, some left eloquent letters and journals drawn upon here by the author. Fatalism, she shows, was a common attitude among the women; annual pregnancies were expected to ensure potential earners and compensate for high infant mortality. Weatherford records the toll that hardship and adjustment to American life in cities and on farms took on the health of these women, their marriages and the family structure; and depicts the chaotic conditions caused by wars, westward migration, industrialization and labor unrest, amid which women sought to create an independent life for themselves and their children. As one of them put it, "I learned in America not to be afraid." Photos not seen by PW.
This history relies chiefly on vignettes and anecdotes to evoke the quality of life for immigrant women in America. Weatherford surveys many different immigrant groups, including those on the frontier as well as in the cities. Her discussion takes in courting practices, sexual mores, marriage, pregnancy, birth, homes, food, clothing, childrearing, work, separation, desertion, divorce, religion, family relationships, and acculturation. Although the book lacks sufficient context for the discussion and contains little analysis, lay readers should find this treatment both entertaining and instructive. Recommended for public libraries.« less