Condition: Acceptable. Packed in a RIGID mailerwith cardboard backing and padding. (See Photos)! Ships same or next day (weekdays and Saturdays)! Ships from California. Pages: writing and marks on multiple pages, otherwise, not written on, clean, bright, odor free. Cover: clean, bright, edges and corner tips “good”= light to moderate bumping and/or rubbing. ABOUT THIS:
This is a highly original and intriguing book which should attract a good deal of interest. It is based on exhaustive, quite remarkable archival research and includes a sophisticated prosopographical analysis of Jewish enrollment over several decades. Most intriguing, the book unearths hitherto unknown information about the growing influence on University policy of the famously anti-Semitic Henry Ford and figures in Ford’s orbit. Despite the contentious nature of their research topic, the authors maintain a consistently detached, non-judgmental, yet intellectually incisive perspective. The result is an entirely credible, well written, often quite exciting chronicle of a minority, most of whose families had been in America for only one or two generations, striving to define themselves, and the response of the Gentile community to those aspirations. Given the centrality of immigration politics in the US and Europe at the present moment, this story has wide contemporary relevance.
Victor Lieberman,
Raoul Wallenberg Distinguished University Professor of History,
University of Michigan