Hopelessly Alien

The Italian Immigration Experience in Chicago Heights

Louis Corsino author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:State University of New York Press

Published:2nd Nov '24

Should be back in stock very soon

Hopelessly Alien cover

An in-depth sociological investigation of "hope" as it applies to the Italian immigrant experience in the blue-collar suburb of Chicago Heights between 1910 and 1950.

Hopelessly Alien is an in-depth study of Italian immigration to Chicago Heights, Illinois, between 1910 and 1950. Drawing upon oral histories, interviews, historical documents, and census materials, Louis Corsino examines the critical concept of hope, which most immigration studies have cast in privatized, psychological terms as the motivation to emigrate in search of a better life. This investigation offers a more contentious, sociological perspective, depicting hope as both an ideological lure to recruit and manage the "foreign element" and as a resource immigrants employed to purchase acceptance and avoid a disparaging label as a "hopelessly alien" stranger. These dialectical processes are illustrated through the Italian immigrants' pursuit of occupational mobility and homeownership, and the appropriation of their children's hopes. Each became forms of cultural capital that demonstrated a public commitment to the American ethos of "joyful striving." Each provided measures of success, but these individual pursuits came at the expense of upsetting the necessary tension between individual and communal hopes.

"…[Corsino] masterfully challenges the widely held belief that immigrants left Italy solely due to a desire for greater social status and upward economic mobility in their adopted homeland … While this book is an important contribution to both Italian American studies specifically and immigration and ethnic studies more broadly, it also is a wonderful contribution to furthering readers' understanding of the tension and struggle between individual and communal hopes and between private aspirations and common meanings and desires." — CHOICE

"This book upends the widely held belief that immigrants' decision to leave Italy was fueled solely by a hope for upward mobility and a greater social status than could be attained by remaining in Italy. While nominally a case study of Italian immigrants in Chicago, Corsino's findings will certainly spur researchers to examine not only the experiences and motivations of Italian immigrants elsewhere in the United States, but those of other ethnic groups as well, and have the potential to lead to a wholesale reexamination of immigration motivation en masse." — John R. Mitrano, Central Connecticut State University

ISBN: 9781438497617

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 263g

188 pages