the great arizona orphan abduction book review

Linda Gordon uses the story of the abduction of forty white orphans originally promised to Mexican Catholic families in the border communities of Southeastern Arizona to explore issues of race, gender, and vigilantism. Along the way, Gordon cracks open a number of hot issues, from labor relations to women’s roles. Elie Wiesel, by

The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction book. There are strains of religion in this book as well since the criteria for the sisters of the order were good catholic homes. Atlantic senior writer Coates (The Beautiful Struggle: A Father, Two Sons, and an Unlikely Road to Manhood, 2008) offers this eloquent memoir as a letter to his teenage son, bearing witness to his own experiences and conveying passionate hopes for his son’s life. This story of children that became the rope in a tug of war between races and religions culminates in a Supreme Court decision that ruled the adoption to be “child abuse.” Her book also demonstrates how racially motivated many institutions in the United States were, and still, are. So good and then somewhat boring.

Gordon (History/Univ.

Although the book uses the orphans' arrival as a jumping-off point, it is actually a study of what happened among the various racial groups when the children arrived. Interesting narrative about a little known chapter in the Orphan Train movement around the turn of the last century. In 1904 a young Catholic priest from France serving a parish in a copper mining camp in the mountains of Arizona helped the New York Foundling Hospital arrange for placements of Irish American orphans in his parish. This book is a hybrid easy to read and still steeped in academia.

Clifton/Morenci, Arizona, was a "wild West" boomtown, where the mines and smelters pulled in thousands of Mexican immigrant workers. Must academic monographs be bone-achingly boring? They didn't dare.) She is the author of numerous books and won the Bancroft Prize for, Independent Publisher Book Award (IPPY) Nominee for Multicultural Nonfiction (Finalist) (2000), Wisconsin Library Association Literary Award (2000), Born in the 1950s - What we've read in 2015, Microhistories: Microscopic Studies of Individual Events, People and Places. STUDY. Need another excuse to treat yourself to a new book this week? | This is a fine grained analysis of a specific incident that tells much about the attitudes in the United States, particularly out west about race, but also about class and gender. This is a fascinating piece of history. | translated by You want details about two small early 1900s copper mining towns? It is a socio-economic-gender-racial study of the period around the turn of the twentieth century, and specifically dealing with two Arizona mining towns. The Great Arizona Orphan Abduction. The children were brought West by Catholic nuns on the little-known orphan trains that transported children of poor families across the country for adoption. More than 300 pages of substantiation that white folk discriminate with all their might against nonwhite folk -- this cannot be a surprise to ANYone in this country! HOLOCAUST Should we be embarrassed and feel guilty, especially through the current perspectives? Urwin, Journal of the West, “[A] fascinating, almost cinematic book… Gordon has brilliantly retrieved history, in the process providing a vivid, complex addition to the growing scholarship on ‘whiteness.’”—JoAnn Wypijewski, Lingua Franca, “Gordon’s extraordinary achievement in this book lies in her narrative strategy as much as in her insights as a social historian: she alternates dramatic short chapters detailing the events in the mining communities of Clifton-Morenci from the first to the fourth of October 1904 with longer, denser ones that reconstruct the conflation of class, gender, racial, religious, and economic interests that initiated the children’s journey west from New York City and underlay their distribution by Father Mandin, the local priest.”—Gay Wachman, Women’s Review of Books, “Economics, religion, and racial and sexual politics intersect in this fascinating account of the social upheaval caused when Mexicans in a small Arizona mining town in 1904 adopted 40 abandoned Irish-Catholic children from New York. Understandably! RELEASE DATE: Nov. 1, 1999, Microhistory at its best. There is an extended discussion of vigilantism that is quite enlightening. The astonishing story Gordon has recovered considers vexed intellectual questions about race, class and gender in a dramatic, accessible fashion.”—Maureen Corrigan, Newsday, “A story of racism, vigilantism, and injustice that retains its grim fascination after nearly a century… The sordid but suspenseful story is told against a background that encompasses the mining industry, labor unions and even a waffling U.S. Supreme Court.”—Parade Magazine, “In 1904, a group of New York nuns delivered 40 mostly Irish but entirely Catholic orphans to a remote Arizona mining town to be adopted by local Catholics. She found an incredible story and did meticulous research, as one would expect of Linda Gordon. Magazine Subscribers (How to Find Your Reader Number). Yes, the author researched her subject thoroughly, but there were aspects of this situation that I felt were presented in the wrong light.

September 2001; The American Journal of Legal History 106(2) DOI: 10.2307/2651678.

And this is where it belongs. between richer white folk and their darker-skinned, "lower class" neighbors is the sad piece. Such poor organization and lack of communication as to have something that big go wrong. This book was really informative and really opened my eyes about events that had happened in Arizona in the early 20th century. It wasn't good, and it would take far longer than I am willing to spend to try to explain it. This episode in Arizona history built upon the groundwork for the economic, political and racial views that founded the state, established it's elite classes, defined both the citizens and the non-citizens by color, religion and status, empowered women, particularly Anglo women, and drove the mining companies in the mountains in the Clifton-Morenci areas to achiev. They got white on the train to Arizona. RELEASE DATE: July 8, 2015. ‧ Elie Wiesel Gordon seemed to dig so deep and so far afield of the actual event to prove her points, that I found it irritating.

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