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Dispossessing Massa: Fugitive Slaves and the Politics of Slavery After 1850
Authors:RJM Blackett
Institution:1. Department of History , Vanderbilt University , Nashville , USA richard.j.blackett@vanderbilt.edu
Abstract:This article investigates how Norwegian immigrants expressed their sense of belonging during the antebellum period. By focusing on the concept of “belonging” rather than “adjustment,” the article attempts an interpretation sensitive to how antebellum immigrants themselves perceived the process of adaptation to American society. The Civil War is usually referred to as a sort of watershed in Norwegians' adjustment to American society, and consequently scholars have downplayed the extent to which antebellum Norwegian immigrants expressed belonging in the United States prior to the Civil War. Identifying three main categories of expressions of belonging available to antebellum Norwegian immigrants – namely land ownership, place attachment, and settler ideology – the article concludes that even if these immigrants did not readily identify themselves as Americans, they became firmly attached to their new home.
Keywords:Norwegian Americans  belonging  immigration  Midwest
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