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History Matters: The Origins
and Development of the Immigration
and Ethnic History Society
JUNE GRANATIR ALEXANDER
THE IMMIGRATION AND ETHNIC
HISTORY SOCIETY came into existence during an era of intellectual ferment
that spawned new approaches to the study of the past and rekindled an
interest in the history of ordinary people. Although it has changed names,
for four decades since it began life in the 1960s as the "Immigration
History Group," the society has promoted the study of international migration
and immigrant and ethnic history. To date, however, the Immigration and
Ethnic History Society's own history has gone largely untold and unrecorded.
By providing a brief description of the society's origins and subsequent
development, the following account attempts to endow an organization long
dedicated to furthering the study of history with a modest history of
its own. This preliminary foray into the society's past is an attempt
to relate how, as the organization struggled to establish a functional
administrative structure and secure a loyal membership base, it also grappled
with more perplexing issues of its identity, objectives, and visibility.
In hindsight, it becomes apparent that embracing diverse ideological orientations
and varied scholarly interests has long been a hallmark of the organization
and a factor that has stirred and enlivened constructive debate. While
the narrative of any organization's past is necessarily and mostly institutional
history, to gain a more complete picture requires placing that story within
a broader context. For the Immigration and Ethnic History Society (IEHS),
that context spans the academic world and beyond. Since its formative
years, the organization has been significantly affected not only by shifting
scholarly trends but also by social and political realities confronting
American society.
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