Epistolary Ethics: Personal
Correspondence and the
Culture of Emigration in
the Nineteenth Century
by David A. Gerber
AFTER MANY DECADES of presenting historians with a perplexing combination
of analytical opportunities and interpretive problems that almost succeeded
in creating a stalemate in our ability to make systematic use of it, the
immigrant letter is again insistently presenting itself for our attention.
Immigrant letters have long been recognized as offering a unique opportunity—they
are the most widely proliferated and in volume the largest source we possess
of the writings of ordinary people. At present, too, there are compelling
disciplinary reasons leading us back to immigrant letters. The effort
to find ways to use these letters has lately grown in intensity alongside
the burgeoning interest in personal and popular texts, textuality, narrativity,
discourse, and linguistic theory in both the humanities and the social
sciences. At the same time, however, as I have suggested in a recent essay
in this journal, it has not proven any easier for contemporary historians
to conceive of methods for decoding immigrant letters than it did for
either the early twentiethcentury sociologists William I. Thomas and Florian
Znaniecki or social historians such as Theodore Blegen, George Stephenson,
and Marcus Lee Hansen, all of whom were pioneers in the effort to make
analytical use of immigrant letters.
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