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Article

Volume 23 • Number 4

Summer 2004



 


The Interwar Origins of the White Ethnic: Race, Residence, and German Philadelphia, 1917–1939

RUSSELL A. KAZAL


ON A RAINY DAY IN 1968, a reporter named Peter Binzen walked into a tavern in Kensington, a working-class neighborhood of Philadelphia. As Binzen entered, he heard "the barkeep and his lone customer . . . exchanging views on a favorite subject: niggers." The customer, "a white-trash nigger hater," was making little headway with the bartender, a man "who looked to be of German extraction." " 'There's good whites and good niggers,' " Binzen recalled the bartender as saying. " 'Bad whites and bad niggers.' "


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