Review by Choice Review
Anthropologist Lackey (founder, Urban Anthropology Inc.) presents the findings of a study of ethnic practices among a sample of 434 individuals in the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, area. The author discusses the continued salience of ethnicity in the lives of her informants in the realms of organizational involvement, language, homeland remittances, religion, foodways, art, health care, genealogy, politics, and employment. She also presents informants' views of what they perceive as some of the primary threats to the maintenance of their ethnicity, as well as data and snapshots of informant interviews on a range of relevant topics. In a short concluding section, Lackey discusses the study's broader implications for understanding contemporary ethnicity in the US, though this section is limited to just a few pages, unfortunately. This case study from one metropolitan area will definitely be of interest to students and scholars working in ethnic studies, particularly those conducting research and teaching in the Midwest. Summing Up: Recommended. All academic levels/libraries. M. E. Pfeifer State University of New York Institute of Technology
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review