Anonymous wrote:There's actually no such thing as "German Americans," just as there's no such thing as "Italian Americans." During the time of greatest immigration from these areas of the world, the countries of Germany and Italy did not exist. People came from different provinces and Hanseatic leagues. Someone emigrating from Hamburg did not consider herself to be a countrywoman to someone from Prussia. Someone emigrating from Napoli did not consider himself to be coming from the same country as someone from Tuscana.
Anonymous wrote:Over 40 million Americans are of German ancestry. Yet there's no "German American" lobby, no "German American" vote, no German neighborhoods etc.
I'm from Chicago originally, and the Irish and Poles are much more visible than those of German ancestry.
Anonymous wrote:Almost all my half-German aunts and uncles married WASPs — Germany has a history of deep-seated Anglomania/Anglophilia.
Anonymous wrote:I’m from Milwaukee and there was a huge German American presence and lots of German food and culture there!
Anonymous wrote:There's actually no such thing as "German Americans," just as there's no such thing as "Italian Americans." During the time of greatest immigration from these areas of the world, the countries of Germany and Italy did not exist. People came from different provinces and Hanseatic leagues. Someone emigrating from Hamburg did not consider herself to be a countrywoman to someone from Prussia. Someone emigrating from Napoli did not consider himself to be coming from the same country as someone from Tuscana.