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Rainbow's End

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Unprecedented in its scope, Rainbow's End provides a bold new analysis of the emergence, growth, and decline of six classic Irish-American political machines in New York, Jersey City, Chicago, San ...
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  • 09 August 1990
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Unprecedented in its scope, Rainbow's End provides a bold new analysis of the emergence, growth, and decline of six classic Irish-American political machines in New York, Jersey City, Chicago, San Francisco, Pittsburgh and Albany. Combining the approaches of political economy and historical sociology, Erie examines a wide range of issues, including the relationship between city and state politics, the manner in which machines shaped ethnic and working-class politics, and the reasons why centralized party organizations failed to emerge in Boston and Philadelphia despite their large Irish populations. The book ends with a thorough discussion of the significance of machine politics for today's urban minorities.
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Price: $33.95
Pages: 359
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: California Series on Social Choice and Political Economy
Publication Date: 09 August 1990
ISBN: 9780520071834
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"...a provocative reinterpretation of the rise and fall of the Irish bosses. . . there is [a] great deal to chew on in Mr. Erie's iconoclastic book. One after the other, he challenges views of the old machines that sentimentality has erected into verities."
Steven P. Erie is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego.
List of Tables
Preface

I. The Irish and the Big-City Machines
2. Building the Nineteenth-Century Machines, 1840-1896
3· Guardians of Power: The Irish Versus the New
Immigrants, 1896-1928
4. The Crisis of the 1930s: The Depression, the New Deal,
and Changing Machine Fortunes, 1928-1950
5· The Last Hurrah? Machines in the Postwar Era,
1950-1985
6. Machine Building, Irish-American Style
7· Rainbow's End: Machines, Immigrants, and
the Working Class

Notes
Bibliography
Index