People on the Move: Attitudes toward and Perceptions of Migration in Medieval and Modern Europe
By (Author) Harald Kleinschmidt
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th December 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
Human geography
304.8094
Hardback
304
While most people in the world are descendants of migrants, not everyone is conscious of the migration patterns of their ancestors. The goals and motives for moving or staying are changing, diverse, and often difficult to specify. As a result of 19th-century residentialist social and political theories, many scholars generally assume that migration is a pattern of behavior that deviates from the norm and requires a specific motive or reason. This study details the variety of changing historical patterns of migrant behavior by examining migration patterns over 1500 years in Europe and Southeast Asia. Kleinschmidt researches migrants and describes how they viewed themselves. He also includes a look at lawmakers, political decision-makers, and administrators to analyze the changes of their attitudes towards and perceptions of migration. The study places migration within and out of the two regions into a long timeframe to demonstrate the ubiquitous and transience of patterns of migrant behavior. It considers external attitudes and perceptions of migration within the context of the social and political theories of their own time. The two distinct geographic foci of the study allow for discussion of the characteristic features of each region.
Five well-researched chapters discuss theory and specific examples of migration from antiquity through the 20th century.... This compelling analysis is best suited for those with a background in the field. The extensive chapter endnotes reflect an extraordinary breadth of research....Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.-Choice
This is an interesting book concerning a relatively under researched area.-American Historical Review
"This is an interesting book concerning a relatively under researched area."-American Historical Review
"Five well-researched chapters discuss theory and specific examples of migration from antiquity through the 20th century.... This compelling analysis is best suited for those with a background in the field. The extensive chapter endnotes reflect an extraordinary breadth of research....Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."-Choice
HARALD KLEINSCHMIDT is Professor of History at the University of Tsukuba in Japan. Born at Gottingen, West Germany, he graduated from the University of Gottingen. After teaching at the University of Stuttgart, he transferred to Tsukuba in 1989. He became Extraordinary Professor of European Studies at the University of Tokyo in 2000. He has many publications in both English and German.