Acknowledgments
Introduction by Marcelo J. Borges, Sonia Cancian, and Linda
Reeder
Chapter 1. What's Love Got to Do with It? Language of Transnational
Affect in the Letters of Portuguese Migrants by Marcelo J.
Borges
Chapter 2. "The Letter Said That My Wife Had Died": Bigamy in
Argentina in the Era of Mass Migration by María Bjerg
Chapter 3. "People Cannot Live on Love Alone": Negotiating Love,
Gender Roles, and Family Care between Slovenia and Egypt by Mirjam
Milharcic Hladnik
Chapter 4. Love, Mobility, and Fate in Turn-of-the-Century Berlin
by Tyler Carrington
Chapter 5. Brotherly Love: The Forging of an Italian-Argentine
Brotherhood in Argentina, 1880-1920 by Elizabeth Zanoni
Chapter 6. "Let Them Deport Me, I Will Come Back to Him Again":
Romance, Affective Relations, and the US Deportation Regime,
1919-1935 by Emily Pope-Obeda
Chapter 7. The Emotions of War: Italian Emigrant Soldiers and Love
of Country by Linda Reeder
Chapter 8. Maintaining Relationships and Creating Epistolary
Personae: (Not) Articulating Emotions in the Letters of a Viennese
Family of the Mid-Twentieth Century by Suzanne M. Sinke
Chapter 9. Love at the Threshold of War and Migration: A War
Orphan's Story by Sonia Cancian
Chapter 10. Emotional Rhetoric and Sexualized Livelihood: Marriage
and Transatlantic Migration in Postwar Germany by Alexander
Freund
Chapter 11. "When I Came to Canada, All I Did Was Cry": Emotions
and Migration of Greek Women in Postwar Montreal by Margarita
Dounia
Chapter 12. Stories of Love and Marriage in the Modern British
Diaspora: Themes of Change and Continuity by A. James Hammerton
Chapter 13. "I Can Express My Feelings with Just a Tweet":
Language, Emotion, and the Digital Divide among Immigrant Families
in Italy by Roberta Ricucci
Epilogue by Donna R. Gabaccia
Contributors
Index
Marcelo J. Borges is a professor of history at Dickinson College. He is the author of Chains of Gold: Portuguese Migration to Argentina in Transatlantic Perspective. Sonia Cancian is an assistant professor in the department of interdisciplinary studies at Zayed University in Dubai. She is the author of Families, Lovers, and Their Letters: Italian Postwar Migration to Canada. Linda Reeder is an associate professor of history and chair of women's and gender studies at the University of Missouri. She is the author of Widows in White: Migration and the Transformation of Rural Italian Women, Sicily, 1880–1920.
"The rich empirical case studies of this substantive volume are
difficult to cover fully in a short review. They bring the
sensitivity of the history of emotion to bear on love's complexity,
historicity, and changing nature, as defined and shaped through
gender and place." --Journal of Interdisciplinary History
"A valuable insight into the multifaceted migration experience
imbued with emotions. . . . Love, gender, and migration are
interwoven in all the narratives. Love as a driving force of
migration, its meaning, the main bond overcoming distance, and an
affective underpinning of public discourse pursuing political
interests." --Two Homelands
"This is a fascinating collection, giving us access to the
emotional experience of groups we have not yet seen from this angle
and amplifying our understanding of a key emotion as well."
--Peter Stearns, author of Shame: A Brief History
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