Making Italian America
Consumer Culture and the Production of Ethnic Identities
by Edited by Simone Cinotto
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Apr 01 2014 | Archive Date May 30 2014
Description
How do immigrants and their children forge their identities in a new land--Land how does the ethnic culture they create thrive in the larger society? Making Italian America brings together new scholarship on the cultural history of consumption, immigration, and ethnic marketing to explore these questions by focusing on the case of an ethnic group whose material culture and lifestyles have been central to American life: Italian Americans.
As embodied in fashion, film, food, popular music, sports, and many other representations and commodities, Italian American identities have profoundly fascinated, disturbed, and influenced American and global culture. Discussing in fresh ways topics as diverse as immigrant women's fashion, critiques of consumerism in Italian immigrant radicalism, the Italian American influence in early rock 'n' roll, ethnic tourism in Little Italy, and Guido subculture, Making Italian America recasts Italian immigrants and their children as active consumers who, since the turn of the twentieth century, have creatively managed to articulate relations of race, gender, and class and create distinctive lifestyles out of materials the marketplace offered to them. The success of these mostly working-class people in making their everyday culture meaningful to them as well as in shaping an ethnic identity that appealed to a wider public of shoppers and spectators looms large in the political history of consumption. Making Italian America appraises how immigrants and their children redesigned the market to suit their tastes and in the process made Italian American identities a lure for millions of consumers.
Fourteen essays explore Italian American history in the light of consumer culture, across more than a century-long intense movement of people, goods, money, ideas, and images between Italy and the United States--a diasporic exchange that has transformed both nations. Simone Cinotto builds an imaginative analytical framework for understanding the ways in which ethnic and racial groups have shaped their collective identities and negotiated their place in the consumers' emporium and marketplace.
Grounded in the new scholarship in transnational U.S. history and the transfer of cultural patterns, Making Italian America illuminates the crucial role that consumption has had in shaping the ethnic culture and diasporic identities of Italians in America. It also illustrates vividly why and how those same identities--incorporated in commodities, commercial leisure, and popular representations--have become the object of desire for millions of American and global consumers.
A Note From the Publisher
Advance Praise
“This is an important volume contributing to the
diachronic study of Italian American culture and identity and their
intersections with symbolic and material consumption in a transnational
framework. The sociological analysis advances an understanding of ethnicity
beyond the ideology of easily disposable symbolic identities, opening new
venues for thinking about European Americans.”—Yiorgos Anagnostou, The Ohio
State University
“Wherever you turn in Simone Cinotto’s chock-full volume of essays, Italian
American identity is revealed as Consumer-Made, Consumer-Making,
Commodity-Using, Commodity-Abusing: from fashion consciousness upon arrival to
late-generation Armani mafiosi, from Valentino and Caruso to
Guido-and-Guidette, and from Charles Atlas’s dynamic tension to the
Calipari–Izzo split in sideline schtick. The resultant history is as rigorous
as it is capacious, the sociology diversely insightful and at times inspired,
and the critical intelligence almost always that of hardball dagotude—that form of intellectual
witness, swapped and reswapped across the Mediterranean Atlantic, at once
fiercely loving and deeply suspicious. Wednesday is once again Prince Spaghetti
Day, L’America!”—Thomas J. Ferraro, Duke University
“This compelling and innovative volume captures the complexities of the pivotal
role of consumption in the historical formation of transnational Italian
American taste, positing a distinctive diasporic consumer culture that
continues its importance today. Richly interdisciplinary, the collection
represents an exciting new resource for scholars and students alike.”—Marilyn
Halter, Boston University
“Through its attentiveness to Italian American consumers and the U.S.
consumption of Italianness, this collection of essays makes a compelling case
for taste as a leading determinant of ethnic identity. Ranging from
nineteenth-century immigration to twenty-first-century popular culture, from
fashion to Italian-themed restaurants, from one side of the Atlantic to the
other and back across again, this volume casts ethnicity as more a matter of
style than of tradition, because of its ever-changing nature. Like the very
best lasagnes—layered, multi-textured, the whole a transcendent blending of the
constituent parts—Making Italian America reveals how we have all come to
be at least partly Italian and what this Italianness means.”—Kristin Hoganson,
author of Consumers’ Imperium: The Global Production of American
Domesticity, 1865–1920
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9780823256242 |
PRICE | $35.00 (USD) |
Links
Average rating from 7 members
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Amie Darnell Specht; Shannon Hitchcock
Children's Fiction, Children's Nonfiction, Middle Grade
Colleen Coble; Rick Acker
General Fiction (Adult), Mystery & Thrillers, Romance