Review:
"One of the most comprehensive documents of the history of Indian immigrants in the United States. Rangaswamy demonstrates full command of the history, culture, and linguistic profile of America's Indian community, offering both insiders' and outsiders' perspectives on issues of importance to immigrants."-Rajeshwari Pandharipande, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign "It is, I believe, the best balanced single study of a modern Indian community in America. Its treatment is far too complex for a brief review to do it justice, but she covers much more than just Chicago.But the greatest strength of this book is its broad analytical assessment of the Asian Indian community in Chicago, its organizations, and the generational and other strains and stresses within it." -Roger Daniels, International Migration Review "This book is the newest addition to the growing literature on this subject, and perhaps the most detailed, comprehensive, and articulate one."-Parmatma Saran, American Journal of Sociology "This is a theoretically sensitive, readable book that is constructed by turns from inside and outside, seeing through screens of race, class, and gender. The text rises above the specific and provides useful general insights to understanding lives of Indian immigrant communities in other parts of the country and the world."-H.S. Bhola, American Historical Review "Rangaswamy's book is a superb resource for the study of Indian immigrants in the U.S. Her documentation of the Indian community in Chicago is not only thorough but interesting and provides readers with a wide variety of both quantitative and ethnographic data that would be useful for researchers in the social sciences as well as the humanities. Essential reading for those interested in issues pertaining to Indian immigration."-Deepak Sarma, Religious Studies Review "One of the most comprehensive documents of the history of Indian immigrants in the United States. Rangaswamy demonstrates full command of the history, culture, and linguistic profile of America's Indian community, offering both insiders' and outsiders' perspectives on issues of importance to immigrants."-Rajeshwari Pandharipande, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Synopsis:
A history of recent Indian immigrants in urban America set against the backdrop of the global diaspora. Padma Rangaswamy draws upon census data and fieldwork complemented by her own surveys and interviews, and sets her study within the international context of global emigration from India.
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