List of Tables
Preface
I. The Irish and the Big-City Machines
2. Building the Nineteenth-Century Machines, 1840-1896
3· Guardians of Power: The Irish Versus the New
Immigrants, 1896-1928
4. The Crisis of the 1930s: The Depression, the New Deal,
and Changing Machine Fortunes, 1928-1950
5· The Last Hurrah? Machines in the Postwar Era,
1950-1985
6. Machine Building, Irish-American Style
7· Rainbow's End: Machines, Immigrants, and
the Working Class
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Steven P. Erie is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of California, San Diego.
"...a provocative reinterpretation of the rise and fall of the
Irish bosses. . . there is [a] great deal to chew on in Mr.
Erie's iconoclastic book. One after the other, he challenges views
of the old machines that sentimentality has erected into
verities."
*New York Times*
"Theoretically, historically and comparatively Rainbow's End is a
significant and provocative contribution to this double process.
Future books will surely depend on it as they draw on political
economy and urban sociology to explain the machine and its
opponents."
*American Journal of Sociology*
"This book should be read and used by those who teach courses with
sections on machine politics in the United States. . . . Erie draws
on a broad literature and effectively challenges some going
interpretations of machines."
*American Political Science Review*
"...Rainbow's End provides a handy and comprehensible review of the
literature on the life cycle of urban machines. By exploring the
varying historical contexts of machine activity, Erie's study also
modifies the conventional wisdom which suggests that the machine
experience offers a feasible option for minorities interested in
transforming the nature of political representation in many
American cities."
*Pennsylvania History*
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