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Adapting to Abundance : Jewish Immigrants, Mass Consumption, and the Search for American Identity

Part of the Columbia history of urban life series
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This is the first large-scale analysis of immigrant life in America to focus on habits of consumption.

Hienze relies on primary sources to show how Jews responded to the prospect of mass consumption in America, familiarizing themselves with activities such as installment buying, vacationing, and advertising.

Heinze examines the relationship between American consumption and holidays; the importance of the immigrant Jewish woman as director of family spending; the significance of clothing; and the high status of the parlour and the piano in Jewish homes.

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Product Details
Columbia University Press
0231068530 / 9780231068536
Paperback / softback
305.892
01/10/1992
United States
276 pages, 17 photos