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3. West Indians and the Residential Landscape of New York
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Kyle D. Crowder
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. West Indian Migration to New York An Overview 1
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Part I. Gender, Work, and Residence
- 1. Early-Twentieth-Century Caribbean Women: Migration and Social Networks in New York City 25
- 2. Where New York’s West Indians Work 52
- 3. West Indians and the Residential Landscape of New York 81
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Part II. Transnational Perspectives
- 4. Transnational Social Relations and the Politics of National Identity: An Eastern Caribbean Case Study 117
- 5. New York as a Locality in a Global Family Network 142
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Part III. Race, Ethnicity, and the Second Generation
- 6. “Black Like Who?” Afro-Caribbean Immigrants, African Americans, and the Politics of Group Identity 163
- 7. Growing Up West Indian and African American: Gender and Class Differences in the Second Generation 193
- 8. Experiencing Success: Structuring the Perception of Opportunities for West Indians 216
- 9. Tweaking a Monolith: The West Indian Immigrant Encounter with “Blackness” 237
- Conclusion. Invisible No More? West Indian Americans in the Social Scientific Imagination 257
- References 277
- Notes on Contributors 297
- Index 301
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. West Indian Migration to New York An Overview 1
-
Part I. Gender, Work, and Residence
- 1. Early-Twentieth-Century Caribbean Women: Migration and Social Networks in New York City 25
- 2. Where New York’s West Indians Work 52
- 3. West Indians and the Residential Landscape of New York 81
-
Part II. Transnational Perspectives
- 4. Transnational Social Relations and the Politics of National Identity: An Eastern Caribbean Case Study 117
- 5. New York as a Locality in a Global Family Network 142
-
Part III. Race, Ethnicity, and the Second Generation
- 6. “Black Like Who?” Afro-Caribbean Immigrants, African Americans, and the Politics of Group Identity 163
- 7. Growing Up West Indian and African American: Gender and Class Differences in the Second Generation 193
- 8. Experiencing Success: Structuring the Perception of Opportunities for West Indians 216
- 9. Tweaking a Monolith: The West Indian Immigrant Encounter with “Blackness” 237
- Conclusion. Invisible No More? West Indian Americans in the Social Scientific Imagination 257
- References 277
- Notes on Contributors 297
- Index 301