Lexington Books
Pages: 146
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-1-4985-7876-9 • Hardback • September 2018 • $99.00 • (£76.00)
978-1-4985-7877-6 • eBook • September 2018 • $94.00 • (£72.00)
Sebahattin Ziyanak is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Texas of the Permian Basin.
Bilal Sert is instructor of sociology at Prairie View A&M University.
Introduction: Turkish Immigration
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
1. Sociological Framework and Theories on Initiating Factors, Adaptations Experiences, and Millet Immigrants from the Ottoman Empire
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
2. Descriptive Analysis for Early Turkish Immigrants
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
3. Initiating Factors for Early Turkish Immigration to the United States
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
4. Early Turkish Immigrant’s Adaptation Experiences
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
5. Theoretical and Practical Implications
Bilal Sert and Sebahattin Ziyanak
6. Academic Success of Turkish Graduate Students at the United States Universities
Jason Hakan Yagci and Sebahattin Ziyanak
7. Understanding the Social Construction of Whiteness through Theories of Race and International Migration: Whitening Experiences and Turkish Immigrants
Sebahattin Ziyanak
8. Ahiska Turks in the United States Since 2004
Sebahattin Ziyanak
9. Global Remedies: How a Turkish Tycoon Conveyed International Culture to Oklahoma
Sebahattin Ziyanak and Dian Jordan
10. Theories for Immigrants and the Second Generation in the Unites States: Transnationalism and Turkish Transmigrant Identity
Sebahattin Ziyanak
This study brings to the discussion the idea of the multiplicity of identity, which the individual may carry, with all the concomitant implications this has for the concept of local and national boundaries. The author also provides in depth insight as to how transnationalism is different from other concepts described in the history of migration. In addition, this book demonstrates how important prevailing migration theories are in understanding the ongoing assimilation process of second-generation immigrants in the United States.
— Jean Ait Belkhir, Southern University at New Orleans
In their book, Turkish Immigrants in the Mainstream of American Life, Ziyanak and Sert offer a detailed, informed, and sociologically-driven analysis of the histories of Turkish immigration, as well as their varied integration experiences in the United States. Ziyanak and Sert deliver a rich and evidence-based narrative that draws upon public records, empirical research, census data, archived newspaper articles, history books, and records from Turkish Cultural Centers, explored through the lenses of an array of socio-historical research methods. This book is an important contribution to the literature on the Turkish-American experience.
— Joseph Comeau, Georgia Southwestern State University