The German identity of Mennonite Brethren immigrants in Canada, 1930-1960
Little scholarly research has been done on the function of Germanism among Mennonites who immigrated to Canada from Russia in the 1920's, and what has been done often relies on an oversimplified "desire for separation" to explain the phenomenon. At the same time, it has been argued th...
Main Author: | Redekop, Benjamin Wall |
---|---|
Language: | English |
Published: |
University of British Columbia
2010
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2429/29142 |
Similar Items
-
Submerged identitites : German Canadian immigrants (1945-1960)
by: Paul, Jeanette Katharine
Published: (2009) -
The boundary between "us" and "them": readers and the non-English word in the fiction of Canadian Mennonite writers
by: Janzen, Beth E.
Published: (2008) -
The boundary between "us" and "them": readers and the non-English word in the fiction of Canadian Mennonite writers
by: Janzen, Beth E.
Published: (2008) -
Fancy Schools for Fancy People: Risks and Rewards in Fieldwork Research Among the Low German Mennonites of Canada and Mexico
by: Robyn Sneath
Published: (2019-01-01) -
Mennonites, community and disease: Mennonite diaspora and responses to the 1918-1920 influenza pandemic in Hanover, Manitoba
by: Quiring, Vanessa
Published: (2015)