This study of the German community of early twentieth-century Buenos Aires is a major contribution to the literature on Argentine history and on the New World immigrant experience. Beginning with the first wave of immigration in the late nineteenth century and continuing to the outbreak of World War II, Ronald C. Newton reconstructs the growth, development, and influence of a powerful foreign population in what was then the largest city in South America.
In the three decades before World War I, Argentina became a major food-producing and exporting country. Through the port of Buenos...
This study of the German community of early twentieth-century Buenos Aires is a major contribution to the literature on Argentine history and on th...