ebook img

IMMIGRATION AND ANARCHISM IN THE UNITED STATES, 1885-1940 by Kenyon Zimmer BA ... PDF

540 Pages·2010·3.04 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview IMMIGRATION AND ANARCHISM IN THE UNITED STATES, 1885-1940 by Kenyon Zimmer BA ...

“THE WHOLE WORLD IS OUR COUNTRY”: IMMIGRATION AND ANARCHISM IN THE UNITED STATES, 1885-1940 by Kenyon Zimmer BA, Bennington College, 2002 MA, University of Pittsburgh, 2005 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Department of History in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 2010 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH SCHOOL OF ARTS & SCIENCES This dissertation was presented by Kenyon Zimmer It was defended on April 29, 2010 and approved by Donna Gabaccia, Professor, Department of History, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis Patrick Manning, Professor, Department of History, University of Pittsburgh Marcus Rediker, Professor, Department of History, University of Pittsburgh Dissertation Advisor: Richard Oestreicher, Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Pittsburgh ii Copyright © by Kenyon Zimmer 2010 iii “THE WHOLE WORLD IS OUR COUNTRY”: IMMIGRATION AND ANARCHISM IN THE UNITED STATES, 1885-1940 Kenyon Zimmer, PhD University of Pittsburgh, 2010 From the 1880s through the 1940s tens of thousands of anarchists were active in the United States, the overwhelming majority of them first- and second-generation immigrants. But most were not yet devotees of the anarchist cause when they arrived on American shores. Instead, a clear link existed between migration and the embrace of anarchist ideology. This study asks how and whythousands of migrants became anarchists, and how their embrace of an anti-nationalist and cosmopolitan ideology shaped their identities, experiences and actions. Utilizing anarchist publications, government surveillance files, and archival materials, it focuses on Eastern European Jews and Italians—the two largest segments of the anarchist movement by the turn of the century—and the development of anarchism among these groups in three important centers of American anarchism: New York‘s Lower East Side, Paterson, New Jersey, and San Francisco. It then follows the changing fortunes of the movement in the face of war, the Russian Revolution, the First Red Scare, and the birth of communism and fascism, and ends with an examination of immigrant American anarchist participation in the Spanish Civil War of 1936-39, and that conflict‘s dramatic impact on the movement in the United States. This study argues that it was American conditions that usually made immigrants into anarchists, rather than European ones, inextricably linking the histories of migration and American anarchism. Nevertheless, the phenomenon of post-migration radicalization defies categorization within most historiographical paradigms of European immigration that focus on iv the construction of ―hyphenated‖ American identities or ―hybrid‖ transnational ones. Anarchists chose an alternative: they embraced an ideology that opposed both Americanization and Old World nationalisms, severing their attachments to their states of origin while willfully resisting assimilation into their host society. They formulated a radical cosmopolitan outlook and identity that embraced diversity, rejected hierarchies, and extended solidarity across national, ethnic, and racial divides. This cosmopolitanism was ultimately unable to withstand the onslaught of competing nationalisms ranging from Americanism to fascism to Zionism, but it stands as an important example of a transnational collective identity delinked from nationalism, the nation- state and racial hierarchies. v TABLE OF CONTENTS TITLE PAGE ................................................................................................................................. I ABSTRACT ................................................................................................................................. IV TABLE OF CONTENTS ........................................................................................................... VI LIST OF TABLES ....................................................................................................................... X 1.0 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................ 1 1.1 OUTLINE AND SCOPE OF PROJECT ........................................................... 3 1.2 “NEW IMMIGRANTS” AND NEW ANARCHISTS .................................... 15 1.3 RADICAL COSMOPOLITANISM ................................................................. 25 2.0 “YIDDISH IS MY HOMELAND”: JEWISH ANARCHISTS IN NEW YORK CITY, 1886-1914 ......................................................................................................................... 31 2.1 FROM SHTETL TO GHETTO ........................................................................ 33 2.2 PIONEERS OF FREEDOM ............................................................................. 38 2.3 ANARCHISM AND THE JEWISH WORKING CLASS ............................. 51 2.4 FREE VOICE OF LABOR ............................................................................... 61 2.5 NO GODS, NO MASTERS ............................................................................... 71 2.6 ANARCHISM, NATIONALISM, AND YIDISHKAYT ................................. 76 2.7 REVISIONISM AND REVOLUTION ............................................................ 90 2.8 THE LINGUISTIC CONUNDRUM .............................................................. 100 vi 2.9 DI FROY IN DER GEZELSHAFT ................................................................. 108 2.10 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 120 3.0 I SENZA PATRIA: ITALIANS AND ANARCHISM IN PATERSON, NEW JERSEY, 1892-1915 .................................................................................................................. 122 3.1 ITALIANS IN THE SILK CITY.................................................................... 123 3.2 ANARCHISTS AND NEIGHBORS .............................................................. 130 3.3 LA QUESTIONE SOCIALE ............................................................................ 139 3.4 AMERICAN REGICIDE ................................................................................ 147 3.5 ANARCHIST COMMUNITY AND CULTURE .......................................... 152 3.6 L’EMANCIPAZIONE DELLA DONNA ......................................................... 164 3.7 “FREE COUNTRY,” THE PATRIA, AND THE POPE .............................. 173 3.8 “A MOB RULED IT” ...................................................................................... 187 3.9 ONE BIG UNION ............................................................................................ 193 3.10 THE 1913 SILK STRIKE ............................................................................... 201 3.11 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 208 4.0 “ALL FLAGS LOOK ALIKE TO US”: IMMIGRANT ANARCHISM IN SAN FRANCISCO, 1894-1916 ......................................................................................................... 210 4.1 ITALIAN ANARCHISM IN SAN FRANCISCO ......................................... 215 4.2 LATIN ANARCHISM AND THE IWW ....................................................... 226 4.3 FREE SPEECH AND THE MEXICAN CONNECTION ........................... 236 4.4 THE YELLOW PERIL AND THE ANARCHIST MENACE .................... 250 4.5 “A TRULY INTERNATIONAL GATHERING” ........................................ 265 4.6 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 275 vii 5.0 ANARCHISM IN CRISIS: WAR, REVOLUTION, AND REACTION, 1914-1924 .................................................................................................................................... 278 5.1 INTERVENTION AND ANTI-MILITARISM ............................................ 280 5.2 “PREPAREDNESS” AND “SLACKERS” ................................................... 290 5.3 RUSSIAN DAWN ............................................................................................ 300 5.4 DYNAMITE AND DEPORTATION ............................................................. 309 5.5 BREAKING CAMINITA ............................................................................... 320 5.6 THE FRONTIERS OF STATE POWER ...................................................... 329 5.7 COMMUNISTS AND ANTICOMMUNISTS ............................................... 338 5.8 FROM BIENNIO ROSSO TO FASCISM ..................................................... 351 5.9 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 355 6.0 “THE UNDESIRABLES OF THIS COUNTRY”: ANARCHISTS ON THE DEFENSIVE, 1925-1936 .......................................................................................................... 357 6.1 NEITHER “WORKERS’ FATHERLAND” NOR “JEWISH HOMELAND” ........................................................................................................................... 360 6.2 CONFRONTING FASCISM .......................................................................... 368 6.3 L’EMANCIPAZIONE ...................................................................................... 385 6.4 “THE LANGUAGE OF THE FUTURE” ..................................................... 395 6.5 COSMOPOLITANS ON TRIAL ................................................................... 404 6.6 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 415 7.0 “FOR A PATRIA WITHOUT BORDERS”: AMERICAN ANARCHISTS AND THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR, 1936-1939 ............................................................................... 418 7.1 “ARMS FOR SPAIN!” .................................................................................... 420 viii 7.2 VOLUNTEERS FOR REVOLUTION .......................................................... 429 7.3 WOMEN AND NONCOMBATANTS ........................................................... 444 7.4 THE MAY DAYS ............................................................................................ 450 7.5 FASCISMO ROJO ........................................................................................... 459 7.6 CONCLUSION ................................................................................................ 465 8.0 CONCLUSION ......................................................................................................... 470 APPENDIX A ............................................................................................................................ 480 APPENDIX B ............................................................................................................................ 485 BIBLIOGRAPHY ..................................................................................................................... 490 ix LIST OF TABLES Table 1. Total Known Circulation of the American Anarchist Press, 1880-1940 ........................ 13 Table 2. Total Known Circulations of the American Yiddish and Italian Anarchist Press, 1880- 1940............................................................................................................................................... 15 Table 3. Italian-Born Population of Paterson, 1890-1930 .......................................................... 124 Table 4. Number of Silk Firms in Paterson, 1890-1909 ............................................................. 127 Table 5. Nativity of San Francisco‘s Population, 1900 .............................................................. 211 Table 6. Italian-Born Population of San Francisco, 1890-1920 ................................................. 216 Table 7. Composition of Selected Occupational Categories in San Francisco by Parents‘ Place of Birth, 1900 .................................................................................................................................. 217 Table 8. Deportations under the Anarchist Exclusion Act, 1918-1925 ...................................... 330 Table 9. American Anarchist Publications with Known Circulations, 1880-1940 ..................... 480 Table 10. Known American Anarchist Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939 ......... 485 x

Description:
focuses on Eastern European Jews and Italians—the two largest segments of the anarchist movement by the turn of ends with an examination of immigrant American anarchist participation in the Spanish Civil dressmaking establishments may work from 6 o'clock in the morning until 12 midnight.
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.