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'Where Everyone Goes to Meet Everyone Else': The Translocal Creation of a Slovak Immigrant Community.


Abstract: Robert Zecker, "'Where Everyone Goes to Meet Everyone Else': The Translocal Creation of a Slovak Immigrant Community"

Around 1910, immigrants were often characterized as living in homogeneous The same. Contrast with heterogeneous.

homogeneous - (Or "homogenous") Of uniform nature, similar in kind.

1. In the context of distributed systems, middleware makes heterogeneous systems appear as a homogeneous entity. For example see: interoperable network.
 ghettoes. For Slovaks in Philadelphia and elsewhere in industrial America, though, community was not geographically but institutionally bounded. A translocal community of churches and fraternals served as ethnic magnets, enabling Slovaks living miles apart to be elastic elastic

Of or relating to the demand for a good or service when the quantity purchased varies significantly in response to price changes in the good or service.
 and selective when forming community. Translocal attachments freed immigrants from ghettoes, and a new paradigm New Paradigm

In the investing world, a totally new way of doing things that has a huge effect on business.

Notes:
The word "paradigm" is defined as a pattern or model, and it has been used in science to refer to a theoretical framework.
 for thinking of immigrant communities--translocal and institutional, not geographical--is proposed. Churches and fraternals served, too, as creators of a binational bi·na·tion·al  
adj.
Of, relating to, or involving two nations.
 identity, for signifiers of Americanness were often adapted to suit immigrant needs, often at variance from native America's. Creative appropriation of Slavic and American culture to meet immigrants' needs also freed them from ghettoes as they negotiated a bi-national identity. This also enabled immigrants to live at peace alongside other ethnic groups with whom they had little contact, but this model of overlapping ethnic communities broke down when Slovaks encountered African-Americans. Through cultural productions such as articles on lynchings in the Slovak press, or minstrel shows minstrel show, stage entertainment by white performers made up as blacks. Thomas Dartmouth Rice, who gave (c.1828) the first solo performance in blackface and introduced the song-and-dance act Jim Crow, is called the "father of American minstrelsy.  at Slovak halls, immigrants learned to think of themselves as "white" people, and thus sadly to make the psychic distance The term ‘Psychic Distance’ is a composite of the Greek word ‘Psychikos’ referring to an individual’s mind and soul (Simpson & Weiner 1989) and ‘Distance’ which is based on perceived cultural differences between a ‘home’ country and a  from blacks as America's ultimate outsiders.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:ABSTRACTS
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 22, 2004
Words:212
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