Library of Congress Demographic Group Terms

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Library of Congress Demographic Group Terms A.M.E. Church members Advocates (Lawyers) UF Acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients USE African Methodist Episcopal Church members USE Lawyers Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients Abusers, Drug Aeronautical historians People living with AIDS USE Drug abusers USE Aviation historians People living with HIV/AIDS Abyssinian speakers Afghan Americans People with AIDS USE Amharic speakers [ethnic/cultural] People with HIV/AIDS Abyssinians (Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church UF Americans, Afghan PLWAs (People living with AIDS) members) Afghans (Afghanistan) PLWHAs (People living with HIV/AIDS) USE Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church [national/regional] PWAs (People with AIDS) members Residents of Afghanistan. BT HIV-positive people Academic librarians BT Asians Air hostesses [occupation/field of activity] Afghans (Asian people) USE Flight attendants UF College librarians USE Pashtuns (Asian people) Air pilots Community college librarians African Americans [occupation/field of activity] University librarians [ethnic/cultural] UF Airline pilots BT Librarians UF Afro-Americans Airplane pilots Academicians Americans, African Aviators USE University and college faculty members Americans, Afro- Pilots, Airplane Academics (University and college faculty members) RT Blacks NT Glider pilots USE University and college faculty members African Methodist Episcopal Church members Military air pilots Accountants [religion] Air stewardesses [occupation/field of activity] UF A.M.E. Church members USE Flight attendants UF Certified public accountants AME Church members Air stewards Chartered accountants BT Methodists USE Flight attendants Public accountants Africans Airline hostesses Acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients [national/regional] USE Flight attendants USE AIDS patients NT Algerians Airline pilots Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients Angolans USE Air pilots USE AIDS patients Basotho Airline stewardesses Actors Batswana USE Flight attendants [occupation/field of activity] Beninese Airline stewards UF Actresses Burkinabe USE Flight attendants Impersonators (Actors) Burundians Airplane pilots Mummers (Actors) Cameroonians USE Air pilots Play actors Central Africans (Central African Republic) al-'Arabiyya speakers Players (Actors) Chadians USE Arabic speakers Stage actors Comorans al-Fusha speakers Thespians Congolese (Brazzaville) USE Arabic speakers Thesps Congolese (Democratic Republic) Alabamans Troupers (Actors) Djiboutians USE Alabamians BT Artists Equatorial Guineans Alabamians Actresses Gabonese [national/regional] USE Actors Gambians UF Alabamans Addicts Ghanaians BT Americans [social] Guineans Alaskans NT Alcoholics Ivoirians [national/regional] Drug addicts Kenyans BT Americans Recovering addicts Liberians Albanaigh Uladh Adjudicators (Administrative law judges) Madagascans USE Ulster Scots USE Administrative law judges Mahorais Albanian speakers Administrative assistants Malawians [language] [occupation/field of activity] Malians UF Shqip speakers People employed to perform administrative duties. Moroccans Shqipëri speakers For people who manage correspondence and routine Mozambicans Albertains work for a superior see Secretaries. Nigerians USE Albertans Administrative law judges Nigeriens Albertans [occupation/field of activity] Réunionese [national/regional] UF Adjudicators (Administrative law judges) Rwandans UF Albertains Examiners, Trial Senegalese BT Canadians Examiners, Hearing Seychellois Alcoholics Hearing examiners Sierra Leoneans [medical, psychological, and disability] Hearing officers Somalis UF Drunkards Judges, Administrative law South Africans Drunks Officers, Hearing South Sudanese Inebriates Trial examiners Southern Africans BT Addicts BT Judges Sub-Saharan Africans NT Recovering alcoholics Administrators, University and college Tanzanians Alcoholics, Parents of USE University and college administrators Togolese USE Parents of alcoholics Adolescents Tunisians Alealum speakers USE Teenagers Ugandans USE Malayalam speakers Adopted people Zambians Algerians USE Adoptees Zimbabweans [national/regional] Adoptees Afrikaans speakers UF Algériens [social] [language] BT Africans UF Adopted people UF Afrikander speakers Algériens Adoptive parents Cape Dutch speakers USE Algerians [social] Afrikander speakers Aliens BT Parents USE Afrikaans speakers [social] Adults Afro-Americans People who are not citizens of the country in which [age] USE African Americans they reside. For foreign-born people who enter a UF Grown-ups country intending to become permanent residents or Aged people citizens see Immigrants. Grownups USE Older people NT Men UF Foreigners Agents, Authors' Allergists Middle-aged people USE Literary agents Older people [occupation/field of activity] Agents, Literary UF Allergologists Women USE Literary agents Young adults Allergy specialists Aging people BT Physicians Adventists USE Older people [religion] Allergologists Ahniyvwiya (North American people) USE Allergists BT Christians USE Cherokee (North American people) NT Seventh-Day Adventists Allergy specialists AIDS patients USE Allergists [medical, psychological, and disability] DG-1 [medical, psychological, and disability] Allied health personnel Puerto Ricans Americans, Vietnamese [occupation/field of activity] Rhode Islanders USE Vietnamese Americans UF Paramedical personnel South Carolinians Americans, West Indian BT Medical personnel South Dakotans USE West Indian Americans NT Dental hygienists Southerners (United States) Amhara speakers Physical therapists Tennesseans USE Amharic speakers Allopathic doctors Texans Amharic speakers USE Physicians Utahns [language] Alzheimer's patients Vermonters UF Abyssinian speakers [medical, psychological, and disability] Virgin Islanders Amarigna speakers BT Patients Virginians Amarinya speakers Alzheimer's patients' families Washingtonians (District of Columbia) Amhara speakers [social] Washingtonians (Washington State) Ethiopian speakers BT Families West Virginians Amphibian biologists Amarigna speakers Westerners (United States) USE Herpetologists USE Amharic speakers Wisconsinites Anaesthesiologists Amarinya speakers Wyomingites USE Anesthesiologists USE Amharic speakers Americans, Afghan Analysts, Economic Ambassadors USE Afghan Americans USE Economists [occupation/field of activity] Americans, African Anatolian speakers UF Commissioners, High (Ambassadors) USE African Americans USE Turkish speakers High commissioners (Ambassadors) Americans, Afro- Andhra speakers Ministers (Ambassadors) USE African Americans USE Telugu speakers BT Diplomats Americans, Arab Anesthesiologists Ambiguous genitalia, People with USE Arab Americans [occupation/field of activity] USE Intersex people Americans, Armenian UF Anaesthesiologists AME Church members USE Armenian Americans Anesthetists USE African Methodist Episcopal Church members Americans, Asian BT Physicians American Baptists USE Asian Americans Anesthetists [religion] Americans, Caribbean USE Anesthesiologists Members of the American Baptist Association. USE Caribbean Americans Anglers BT Baptists Americans, Chinese USE Fishers American Samoans USE Chinese Americans Anglicans [national/regional] Americans, Cuban [religion] BT Americans USE Cuban Americans BT Christians Pacific Islanders Americans, Czech NT Church of Englanders American Sign Language users USE Czech Americans Episcopalians [language] Americans, Czechoslovak Angolans UF ASL users USE Czechoslovak Americans [national/regional] Americans Americans, Dominican BT Africans [national/regional] USE Dominican Americans Animal behaviorists UF United States residents Americans, Eastern European USE Ethologists BT North Americans USE Eastern European Americans Animal behaviourists NT Alabamians Americans, Filipino USE Ethologists Alaskans USE Filipino Americans Animal biologists American Samoans Americans, Finnish USE Zoologists Arizonans USE Finnish Americans Animal doctors Arkansans Americans, Greek USE Veterinarians Bay Staters USE Greek Americans Aniyunwiya (North American people) Californians Americans, Haitian USE Cherokee (North American people) Carolinians USE Haitian Americans Aniyuwiya (North American people) Coloradans Americans, Hispanic USE Cherokee (North American people) Connecticut residents USE Hispanic Americans Aniyvwiya (North American people) Dakotans Americans, Hmong USE Cherokee (North American people) Delawareans USE Hmong Americans Annamese speakers Easterners (United States) Americans, Iranian USE Vietnamese speakers Floridians USE Iranian Americans Anorexia nervosa patients Georgians (State of Georgia) Americans, Irish USE Anorexics Guamanians USE Irish Americans Anorexics Hawaii residents Americans, Italian [medical, psychological, and disability] Idahoans USE Italian Americans UF Anorexia nervosa patients Illinoisians Americans, Japanese BT People with eating disorders Indianans USE Japanese Americans Anthropologists Iowans Americans, Korean [occupation/field of activity] Kansans USE Korean Americans BT Scientists Kentuckians Americans, Latino NT Cultural anthropologists Louisianians USE Hispanic Americans Anthropology students Mainers Americans, Lebanese [social] Marylanders USE Lebanese Americans UF Students, Anthropology Michiganders Americans, Mexican Anthropology teachers Midwesterners USE Mexican Americans [occupation/field of activity] Minnesotans Americans, Norwegian BT Teachers Mississippians USE Norwegian Americans Antigua and Barbuda residents Missourians Americans, Pacific Islander USE Antiguans Montanans USE Pacific Islander Americans Barbudans
Recommended publications
  • SRL 2006 Specialissue 21.Pdf | DOST
    Slavistična revija (https://srl.si) je ponujena pod licenco Creative Commons, priznanje avtorstva 4.0 international. URL https://srl.si/sql_pdf/SRL_2006_Specialissue_21.pdf | DOST. 28/09/21 2.07 UDCNada Šabec, 811.163.6’24:811.111’24 Language, Society and Culture: Slovene in Contact with English 703 Nada [abec Faculty of Arts, Maribor LANGUAGE, SOCIETY AND CULTURE: SLOVENE IN CONTACT WITH ENGLISH The author addresses Slovene-English language contact, both in the immigrant context and in Slovenia. The direct contact of Slovene and English in the case of Slovene Americans and Canadians is examined from two perspectives: social and cultural on the one hand and linguistic on the other. In the fi rst part, I present the general linguistic situation in Cleveland (and to a minor extent in Washington, D.C. and Toronto), with emphasis on language maintenance and shift, the relationship between mother tongue preservation and ethnic awareness, and the impact of extralinguistic factors on selected aspects of the linguistic behavior of the participants in the study. I then compare the use of second person pronouns as terms of address and the use of speech acts such as compliments to determine the role of different cultural backgrounds in the speakers’ linguistic choices. The linguistic part of the analysis focuses on borrowing and code switching, as well as on the infl uence of English on seemingly monolingual Slovene discourse, where the Slovene infl ectional system in particular is being increasingly generalized, simpli- fi ed and reduced, and Slovene word order is beginning to resemble that of English. Finally, the rapidly growing impact of English on Slovene in Slovenia on various linguistic levels from vocabulary to syntax and intercultural communication is discussed.
    [Show full text]
  • Recognised English and UK Ngbs
    MASTER LIST – updated August 2014 Sporting Activities and Governing Bodies Recognised by the Sports Councils Notes: 1. Sporting activities with integrated disability in red 2. Sporting activities with no governing body in blue ACTIVITY DISCIPLINES NORTHERN IRELAND SCOTLAND ENGLAND WALES UK/GB AIKIDO Northern Ireland Aikido Association British Aikido Board British Aikido Board British Aikido Board British Aikido Board AIR SPORTS Flying Ulster Flying Club Royal Aero Club of the UK Royal Aero Club of the UK Royal Aero Club of the UK Royal Aero Club of the UK Aerobatic flying British Aerobatic Association British Aerobatic Association British Aerobatic Association British Aerobatic Association British Aerobatic Association Royal Aero Club of UK Aero model Flying NI Association of Aeromodellers Scottish Aeromodelling Association British Model Flying Association British Model Flying Association British Model Flying Association Ballooning British Balloon and Airship Club British Balloon and Airship Club British Balloon and Airship Club British Balloon and Airship Club Gliding Ulster Gliding Club British Gliding Association British Gliding Association British Gliding Association British Gliding Association Hang/ Ulster Hang Gliding and Paragliding Club British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association Paragliding Microlight British Microlight Aircraft Association British Microlight Aircraft Association
    [Show full text]
  • Slovenian Dances and Their Sources in California
    SLOVENIAN DANCES AND THEIR SOURCES IN CALIFORNIA ELSIE IVANCICH DUNIN Slovenian dance repertoire in California is traced in two Slovenski plesni repertoar v Kaliforniji živi v dveh social contexts: international recreational folk dancing družbenih kontekstih: ob mednarodnih rekreacijskih events and Slovene/American community events. Dancers ljudskih plesnih dogodkih in ob dogodkih slovensko-ameriške in California Folk Dance Federation clubs dance to skupnosti. V klubih kalifornijskega Združenja za ljudske recorded music, while Slovene/American events feature local plese plesalci plešejo ob posnetkih glasbe, medtem ko ob accordion-based bands. Recorded music in the clubs offers slovensko-ameriških dogodkih gostijo lokalne harmonikarske a non-changing soundscape for the dancers, who conform zasedbe. Posneta glasba v klubih ponuja plesalcem uniformly to a taught sequence of a dance that fits the nespremenljivo zvočno podobo: plesalci se poenotijo in recording in contrast to greater dancing variance at Slovene/ uskladijo z naučeno plesno sekvenco, ustrezno glasbenemu American dance events. posnetku, kar je v nasprotju z veliko plesno variantnostjo v Keywords: California; Folk Dance Federation; Slovene/ slovensko-ameriških plesnih dogodkih. Americans; accordion bands; polka Ključne besede: Kalifornija, Združenje za ljudske plese, Slovenci/Američani, harmonikarski orkestri, polka PRELUDE My earliest introduction to dances of Slovenia was by Mirko Ramovš during the Folklore Summer School (Ljetna škola folklora), held at the sport’s center on Badija island (near the island of Korčula), August 1969, and then again on Badija in 1971. I remember his care- ful and well-organized instructions with background information on the dances. I recall thinking that his fine teaching had to do with his knowledge of Kinetography Laban, which is an excellent tool to perceive and to analyze dancing movements, but also to describe movements to those of us who were not familiar with the dance forms.
    [Show full text]
  • Roller Derby: Past, Present, Future RESEARCH PAPER for ASU’S Global Sport Institute
    Devoney Looser, Foundation Professor of English Department of English, Arizona State University Tempe, AZ 85287-1401 [email protected] Roller Derby: Past, Present, Future RESEARCH PAPER for ASU’s Global Sport Institute SUMMARY Is roller derby a sport? Okay, sure, but, “Is it a legitimate sport?” No matter how you’re disposed to answer these questions, chances are that you’re asking without a firm grasp of roller derby’s past or present. Knowledge of both is crucial to understanding, or predicting, what derby’s future might look like in Sport 2036. From its official origins in Chicago in 1935, to its rebirth in Austin, TX in 2001, roller derby has been an outlier sport in ways admirable and not. It has long been ahead of the curve on diversity and inclusivity, a little-known fact. Even players and fans who are diehard devotees—who live and breathe by derby—have little knowledge of how the sport began, how it was different, or why knowing all of that might matter. In this paper, which is part of a book-in-progress, I offer a sense of the following: 1) why roller derby’s past and present, especially its unusual origins, its envelope-pushing play and players, and its waxing and waning popularity, matters to its future; 2) how roller derby’s cultural reputation (which grew out of roller skating’s reputation) has had an impact on its status as an American sport; 3) how roller derby’s economic history, from family business to skater-owned-and- operated non-profits, has shaped opportunity and growth; and 4) why the sport’s past, present, and future inclusivity, diversity, and counter-cultural aspects resonate so deeply with those who play and watch.
    [Show full text]
  • The Unladylike Ladies of Roller Derby?: How Spectators, Players and Derby Wives Do and Redo Gender and Heteronormativity in All-Female Roller Derby
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by White Rose E-theses Online The Unladylike Ladies of Roller Derby?: How Spectators, Players and Derby Wives Do and Redo Gender and Heteronormativity in All-Female Roller Derby Megan Geneva Murray PhD The University of York Women’s Studies January 2012 Abstract All-female roller derby is a rapidly growing full-contact sport played on quad roller skates, with a highly popularized punk, feminine, sexual and tough aesthetic. Utilising theories on the institution of heterosexuality, I conducted a qualitative study on all-female roller derby which evaluated the way in which derby aligns with or challenges heteronormativity. In order to approach this question, I analysed, firstly, thirty-eight interviews with spectators, and twelve with players about their interactions with spectators. Secondly, I interviewed twenty-six players about the phenomenon of “derby wives,” a term used to describe particular female friendships in roller derby. My findings relate the complex relationship between players and spectators by focusing on: (i) spectators’ interpretations of the dress, pseudonyms, and identities of players, as well as the ways in which they were actively involved in doing gender through their discussions of all-female, coed, and all-male roller derby; (ii) players’ descriptions of their interactions with spectators, family members, romantic partners, friends and strangers, regarding roller derby. Additionally, I address the reformulation of the role “wife” to meet the needs of female players within the community, and “derby wives” as an example of Adrienne Rich’s (1980) “lesbian continuum.” “Derby girls” are described as “super heroes” and “rock stars.” Their pseudonyms are believed to help them “transform” once they take to the track.
    [Show full text]
  • Sports Council for Glasgow Membership List, August 2019
    www.scglasgow.org.uk Sports Council For Glasgow Membership List, August 2019 Name Sport Andrew Steen Individual Member Archie Graham O.B.E. Honorary Life Member Argo Boxing Club Boxing Bernie Mitchell Individual Member Carmyle Bowling Club Bowls Castlemilk Gym Weightlifting Ceann Craige Hurling and Comogie Club Hurling / Camogie City of Glasgow SEALS Swimming City of Glasgow Swim Team Swimming Clyde Amateur Rowing Club Rowing Clydesdale Amateur Rowing Club Rowing Clydesdale Cricket Club Cricket Cricket Scotland Cricket David Mackie Individual Member Dilawer Singh M.B.E. Individual Member Drumchapel & Clydebank Kayak Club Kayaking Drumchapel & District Sports Centre Multi-sport Drumchapel Lawn Tennis Club Tennis Drumchapel Table Tennis Development Scheme Table Tennis Drumchapel United Football Elaine Mackay Individual Member Frank Clement Honorary Life Member Fusion Football Club Football Garscube Harriers Club Athletics GBM Fitness Multi-sport GHK Ladies Hockey Club Hockey Glasgow & North Strathclyde Badminton Group Badminton Glasgow Academical Sports Club Multi-sport Glasgow Afghan United Football Glasgow Athletics Association Athletics Glasgow City Cup Football Glasgow City Football Club Football Glasgow Coastal Rowing Club Rowing Glasgow Deaf Golf Club Golf Glasgow Devils Basketball Club Basketball Glasgow Disability Badminton Club Badminton Glasgow Disability Sport Multi-sport Glasgow Disability Tennis Tennis Glasgow Eagles Multi-sport Glasgow East Juniors RFC Rugby Glasgow Fever Basketball Club Basketball Sports Council for Glasgow
    [Show full text]
  • Acta Neophilologica 40
    ACTA NEOPHILOLOGICA 40. 1-2 (2007) Ljubljana MIRKOJURAK JAKOB KELEMINA ON SHAKESPEARE' S PLAYS SANDROJUNG WORDSWORTH' S "TINTERN ABBEY" AND THE TRADITION OF THE " HYMNAL" ODE JANES STANONIK MARCUS ANTONIUS KAPPUS: A REEVALUATION DARJA MAZI- LESKOVAR THE FIRST TRANSLATIONS OF LEATHERSTOCKING TALES JERNEJA PETRIC LOUIS ADAMJC'S "OLD ALIEN" AS A RELIC OF ETHNIC DIFFERENTIATION IN THE U.S.A. TATJANA VUKELIC UNDERSTANDING ZORA NEALE HURSTON' S THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD BRANKA KALOGJERA "OLD" VS. "NEW" ETHNICITIES AND MULTIPLE IDENTITIES IN SANDRA CISNEROS' CARAMELO MAJDASAVLE INDIRECT NARRATION: ON CONRAD' S HEART OF DARKNESS AND FITZGERALD' S THEGREATGATSBY DARJA MARINSEK FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION IN AFRICAN AND AFRICAN-AMERICAN WOMEN' S LITERATURE BRIGITA PAYSIC TIME AS THE FIFTH ELEMENT IN MARGARET LAURENCE'S MANAWAKA CYCLE JOHANN GEORG LUGHOFER EINE ANNAHERUNG AN HAND DES FALLBEISPIELS BERTHA VON SUTTNER MIHA PINTARIC THE ROLE OF VIOLENCE IN THE ROMANCES OF CHRETIEN DE TROYES SPELA ZAKELJ L' IRONIE DANS L' ALLEGORIE CHEZ RUTEBEUF PATRIZIA FARINELLI SUL FANTASTICO NELLA NARRATIVA Dl TABUCCHI UROS MOZETIC FROM DOUBLEVALANT TO MONOVALANT DISCOURSE: THE ROLE OF THE TRANSLATOR MIRKOJURAK BERNARD HICKEY. IN MEMORIA M ACTA NEOPHILOLOGICA 40. 1-2 (2007) Ljubljana MIRKOJURAK JAKOB KELEMINA ON SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS ........... .... .. .. ... ........... .... ....... ..... ......... .. 5 SANDROJUNG WORDSWORTH'S "TINTERN ABBEY" AND THE TRADITION OF THE "HYMNAL:' ODE ....... 51 JANES STANONIK MARCUS ANTONIUS KAPPUS: A REEVALUATION .......................................................... 61 DARJA MAZI- LESKOVAR THE FIRST TRANSLATIONS OF LEATHERSTOCKING TALES .............................................. 75 JERNEjA PETRIC LOUIS ADAMIC'S "OLD ALIEN" AS A RELIC OF ETHNIC DIFFERENTIATION IN THE U.S .A. 89 TATJANA VUKELIC UNDERSTANDING ZORA NEALE HURSTON'S THEIR EYES WERE WATCHING GOD ............
    [Show full text]
  • The International Community and the FRY/Belligerents, 1989-1997
    5 Dušan Janjić, team leader Matjaž Klemenčič, team leader Vlado Azinović John Fine Emil Kerenji Albert Bing Zlatko Hadžidedić Vladimir Klemenčič Sumantra Bose Marko Attila Hoare Miloš Ković Daniele Conversi Charles Ingrao Vladimir Petrović Dušan Djordjevich Constantin Iordachi Nikola Samardžić Keith Doubt A. Ross Johnson Brendan Simms Principal author Matjaž Klemenčič acknowledges the extensive input by team members, including several pages of text contributed by Marko Attila Hoare, Charles Ingrao and Albert Bing. Funding from the National Endow- ment for Democracy and the Slovenian Research Council facilitated Prof. Klemenčič’s research, including numerous interviews with Slovenian gov- ernment officials and former U.S. Secretary of State James Baker. Profs. Klemenčič and Dušan Janjić assumed team leadership from John A. Fine (2001-2003) in order to streamline the team’s internet commu- nication. An initial draft was submitted for project-wide review in Novem- ber 2003, which mandated considerable expansion in the chapter’s length and research base. Although the text was adopted following project-wide review in April 2005, further revisions were undertaken in 2008 to address concerns raised by two of the four outside referees in 2010, to accommodate constructive criticism raised in book reviews, and again in 2012 to incorpo- rate new evidence of U.S. and NATO complicity in avoiding the arrest of ICTY indictees. The chapter cites several confidential interviews conducted by SI scholars with several current and former officials from the U.S. State De- partment and IFOR military; in each case their identities have been recorded and stored in the Purdue University archives for later release, upon request, consistent with terms negotiated with each individual.
    [Show full text]
  • Department of History University of Wisconsin—Eau Claire the Rise
    Department of History University of Wisconsin—Eau Claire The Rise and Fall of Slovenian Lodges: The Case of Chicago By: Joshua Cardinal History 489 Research Capstone Professor: Oscar Chamberlain May 20, 2015 Table of Contents i Abstract ii Author’s Note iii Consequences of the Second Industrial Revolution 1-3 Background and History of the Slovenes 4-6 Industrial Chicago and its Immigrant Communities 7-9 The Rise of Chicago’s Ethnic Newspapers 10-15 Slovenian Development in the Chicago Area 14-16 The Amerikanski Slovenec and its Competition 17-19 The Worker’s Voice 20-22 Proletarec Conception 23-24 America’s Changing Political Configuration 25-27 The Growth and Decline of the Lodge System 28-30 WWI and its Impact on Chicago’s Slovene Organizations 31-33 The Roaring 20’s and the Great Depression 34-35 Conclusion to the Rise and Fall of Slovenian Lodges 36-38 Annotated Bibliography 39-43 i Abstract Prosperity during the early 20th century in the United States of America enticed millions of European immigrants to leave their native lands for its shores. Arriving as sojourners and settlers, these new immigrants of various social classes and nationalities found commonality in their belief that America could change their lives for the better. Due to the chaotic nature of immigration, these new immigrant groups found solace and support among members of their own ethnicity. As a consequence, ethnic communities emerged throughout America’s cities and countryside. These communities functioned and survived by providing cultural familiarity in a new land, as well as, economic and social services to immigrants in return for their member support.
    [Show full text]
  • LARSON-DISSERTATION-2020.Pdf
    THE NEW “OLD COUNTRY” THE KINGDOM OF YUGOSLAVIA AND THE CREATION OF A YUGOSLAV DIASPORA 1914-1951 BY ETHAN LARSON DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History in the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2020 Urbana, Illinois Doctoral Committee: Professor Maria Todorova, Chair Professor Peter Fritzsche Professor Diane Koenker Professor Ulf Brunnbauer, University of Regensburg ABSTRACT This dissertation reviews the Kingdom of Yugoslavia’s attempt to instill “Yugoslav” national consciousness in its overseas population of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, as well as resistance to that same project, collectively referred to as a “Yugoslav diaspora.” Diaspora is treated as constructed phenomenon based on a transnational network between individuals and organizations, both emigrant and otherwise. In examining Yugoslav overseas nation-building, this dissertation is interested in the mechanics of diasporic networks—what catalyzes their formation, what are the roles of international organizations, and how are they influenced by the political context in the host country. The life of Louis Adamic, who was a central figure within this emerging network, provides a framework for this monograph, which begins with his arrival in the United States in 1914 and ends with his death in 1951. Each chapter spans roughly five to ten years. Chapter One (1914-1924) deals with the initial encounter between Yugoslav diplomats and emigrants. Chapter Two (1924-1929) covers the beginnings of Yugoslav overseas nation-building. Chapter Three (1929-1934) covers Yugoslavia’s shift into a royal dictatorship and the corresponding effect on its emigration policy.
    [Show full text]
  • Contesting and Constructing Gender, Sexuality, and Identity in Women's Roller Derby
    UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones May 2018 Contesting and Constructing Gender, Sexuality, and Identity in Women's Roller Derby Suzanne Becker Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/thesesdissertations Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, and the Gender and Sexuality Commons Repository Citation Becker, Suzanne, "Contesting and Constructing Gender, Sexuality, and Identity in Women's Roller Derby" (2018). UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones. 3215. http://dx.doi.org/10.34917/13568377 This Dissertation is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been brought to you by Digital Scholarship@UNLV with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this Dissertation in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. This Dissertation has been accepted for inclusion in UNLV Theses, Dissertations, Professional Papers, and Capstones by an authorized administrator of Digital Scholarship@UNLV. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CONTESTING AND CONSTRUCTING GENDER, SEXUALITY, AND IDENTITY IN WOMEN’S ROLLER DERBY By Suzanne R. Becker Bachelor of Arts – Journalism University of Wisconsin, Madison 1992 Master of Arts – Sociology University of Colorado, Colorado Springs 2004 Graduate Certificate in Women’s Studies University of Nevada, Las Vegas 2009 A doctoral project submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy – Sociology Department of Sociology College of Liberal Arts The Graduate College University of Nevada, Las Vegas May 2018 Dissertation Approval The Graduate College The University of Nevada, Las Vegas April 25, 2017 This dissertation prepared by Suzanne R.
    [Show full text]
  • Roller Derby Changed My Life’: Rethinking Marxist Theory of Emancipatory Praxis Through a Case Study of Women’S Flat-Track Roller Derby
    91,500 words ‘Roller derby changed my life’: Rethinking Marxist theory of emancipatory praxis through a case study of women’s flat-track roller derby Polly Lisa Bennett (nee Lisa Farrance) B Social Science (RMIT University) MA Global Media Communication (University of Melbourne) November 2020 Institute of Sustainable Industries and Liveable Cities Victoria University Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Roller derby and emancipatory praxis 2 Abstract This thesis develops upon theories of alienation, social reproduction, ideology and emancipation through a study of how roller derby changes skaters’ lives. The thesis focuses on research participants’ experiences of their bodies within a women-led sport that rejects mainstream conceptions of femininity. It demonstrates how a reimagining of the body through physical activity in an alternative, liberating and mutually-supportive subculture can lead to a renewed sense of power and a rejection of internalised ideological constraints. The thesis describes a five-year, ethnographic case study of roller derby in and around Melbourne, Australia. The thesis draws upon observation of major events, and in-depth interviews with a selection of local skaters and visiting international coaches and organisers, all of whom identified with the saying ‘roller derby changed my life’. The skaters’ life changes are various: leaving abusive relationships; coming out as same-sex attracted or transgender; changing their appreciation for their bodies; or ‘finally finding myself’. The thesis asks, why? It discovered several, inter-connected responses. First, freedom and fulfilment come from becoming physically strong but also competent in a technically difficult sport. Skaters coming to understand what the body can do, for the first time in their lives, is common even to those starting out.
    [Show full text]