Italian American - significado y definición. Qué es Italian American
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Qué (quién) es Italian American - definición

ETHNIC GROUP; AMERICANS OF ITALIAN ANCESTRY
List of famous Italian-Americans; Italian-Americans; Italian in the United States; Italian-American; Italians in the United States; List of U.S. cities with large Italian American populations; Stereotypes of Italian Americans; Italian American; Italoamericani; Italo-americani; Italo-Americani; Italo-Americans; Italo-American; Discrimination against Italian Americans; Political views of Italian Americans; Italian–American; History of Italian Americans; Demographics of Italian Americans; Italian immigrants in the United States; Italian immigration to the United States; Italian immigration to America; Italian Americans in Los Angeles; Italian Americans in politics
  • One of the largest mass [[lynching]]s in American history involved eleven Italian immigrants in [[New Orleans]] in 1891.
  • Columbus Day in [[Salem, Massachusetts]] in 1892
  • 1973 U.S. postage stamp featuring [[Amadeo Giannini]]
  • Americans with Italian ancestry by state according to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey in 2019
  • America]]" is derived<ref>[https://www.livescience.com/42510-amerigo-vespucci.html Szalay, Jessie. ''Amerigo Vespuggi: Facts, Biography & Naming of America'' (citing Erika Cosme of Mariners Museum & Park, Newport News VA). 20 September 2017 (accessed 23 June 2019)]</ref>
  • Historical advertisement of an Italian American restaurant, between circa 1930 and 1945
  • St. Anthony of Padua Church]] in New York was established in 1859 as the first parish in the United States formed specifically to serve the Italian immigrant community.
  • Boston's North End]]
  • Distinguished Service Medal]] from General [[George C. Marshall]], 1945
  • ancestry]] form a plurality.
  • new era]] in the history of humankind and sustained contact between the two worlds.
  • access-date=October 30, 2009}}</ref>
  • [[Danielle Trussoni]]
  • [[Philip Mazzei]], Italian physician and promoter of liberty, whose phrase: "All men are by nature equally free and independent" was incorporated into the [[United States Declaration of Independence]]
  • A war-time poster
  • [[Don DeLillo]]
  • An Italian immigrant making an [[American breakfast]] aided by instructional materials from the [[YMCA]]
  • url-status=dead}}</ref> was awarded the 1938 [[Nobel Prize in Physics]] for his work on [[induced radioactivity]].
  • Feast of the Assumption]] in Cleveland's Little Italy
  • [[Mother Cabrini]]
  • Statue of [[Francis Vigo]]
  • [[Frank Sinatra]] and [[Dean Martin]] in 1963
  • [[Fiorello La Guardia]] with Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1938
  • The [[Garibaldi-Meucci Museum]] on Staten Island
  • Little Italy in Chicago, 1909
  • Italian immigrants entering the United States via [[Ellis Island]] in 1905
  • The [[Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire]] in 1911. The victims were almost exclusively Jewish and Italian female immigrants.
  • Italian-American veterans of all wars memorial, Southbridge, Massachusetts
  • frameless
  • A fourteen year old Italian girl working at a paper-box factory (1913)
  • [[Joe DiMaggio]], considered one of the greatest baseball players of all time, in 1951
  • [[Joe Petrosino]] in 1909
  • [[Lawrence Ferlinghetti]]
  • San Diego's Little Italy]]
  • Italy]] won the [[2006 FIFA World Cup]]
  • Italian Cultural and Community Center ([[Logue House]]) in the [[Houston Museum District]]
  • St. Lucy's Church in Newark
  • Review of the [[Garibaldi Guard]] by President [[Abraham Lincoln]]
  • access-date=April 9, 2017}}</ref> in 1991. He moved to the United States in 1955 with his family during the [[Istrian-Dalmatian exodus]]
  • [[Michael Valente]], recipient of the highest military decoration, the [[Medal of Honor]], for his actions during [[World War I]]
  • date=December 2022}} the official death toll stood at 362, 171 of them Italian migrants.
  • Lower East Side]], circa 1900.
  • Northside in Syracuse
  • Old Neighborhood Italian American Club, [[Las Vegas]]
  • [[Paola Corso]]
  • Italian Market]].
  • [[Enrico Fermi]] between [[Franco Rasetti]] (left) and [[Emilio Segrè]] in [[academic dress]]
  • Sts. Peter and Paul Church]] in North Beach, San Francisco
  • [[Emilio Segrè]], who was awarded the [[Nobel Prize in Physics]] in 1959, was among the Italian Jews who emigrated to the United States after Mussolini's regime implemented an anti-semitic legislation.
  • The "Bambinos" of Little Italy - Syracuse, New York in 1899
  • Nick Nuccio Parkway]]
  • [[Rudolph Valentino]] with [[Alice Terry]] in ''The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse'', 1921
  • [[Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge]] in New York City is named for Giovanni da Verrazzano.
  • Feast of San Gennaro]] in New York
  • Verrazzano]]'s voyage of 1524. The Italian explorer was the first documented European to enter New York Harbor and the Hudson River.
  • Apollo]] programs

Italian-American cuisine         
  • [[New York-style pizza]], at [[Di Fara Pizza]]
  • [[Chicago-style pizza]]
  • ''Risotto''
STYLE OF ITALIAN CUISINE
Pizza rustica; Italian American cuisine
Italian-American cuisine is a style of Italian cuisine adapted throughout the United States. Italian-American food has been shaped throughout history by various waves of immigrants and their descendants, called Italian Americans.
Internment of Italian Americans         
Italian american internment; Italian-american internment; Italian American Internment; Italian-American Internment; Italian-american Internment; Italian american Internment; Italianamerican internment; Italianamerican Internment; The Internment of Italian Americans; Italian internment; Italian Internment; Italian internment camps; Una Storia Segreta; American-Italian Internment; Internment of Italians in the United States; Italian American internment; Italian-American internment
The internment of Italian Americans refers to the government's internment of Italian nationals in the United States during World War II. As was customary after Italy and the US were at war, they were classified as "enemy aliens" and some were detained by the Department of Justice under the Alien and Sedition Act.
Italian-American Civil Rights League         
ORGANIZATION
Italian American Anti-Defamation League; Italian American Anti Defamation League; Italian American Civil rights league
The Italian-American Civil Rights League (IACRL) was originally formed as a political advocacy group created in New York City in April 1970. William Santoro, a defense attorney that represented many Colombo crime family figures, was responsible for the legal work that incorporated the league.

Wikipedia

Italian Americans

Italian Americans (Italian: italoamericani or italo-americani, pronounced [ˌitaloameriˈkaːni]) are Americans who have full or partial Italian ancestry. According to the Italian American Studies Association, the current population is about 18 million, an increase from 16 million in 2010. [1] The largest concentrations of Italian Americans are in the urban Northeast and industrial Midwestern metropolitan areas, with significant communities also residing in many other major U.S. metropolitan areas.

Between 1820 and 2004 approximately 5.5 million Italians migrated from Italy to the United States during the Italian diaspora, in several distinct waves, with the greatest number arriving in the 20th century from Southern Italy. Initially, many Italian immigrants (usually single men), so-called "birds of passage", sent remittance back to their families in Italy and, eventually, returned to Italy; however, many other immigrants eventually stayed in the United States, creating the large Italian American communities that exist today.

In 1870, prior to the large wave of Italian immigrants to the United States, there were fewer than 25,000 Italian immigrants in America, many of them Northern Italian refugees from the wars that accompanied the Risorgimento—the struggle for Italian reunification and independence from foreign rule which ended in 1870.

Immigration began to increase during the 1870s, when more than twice as many Italians immigrated than during the five previous decades combined. The 1870s were followed by the greatest surge of immigration, which occurred between 1880 and 1914 and brought more than 4 million Italians to the United States, the largest number coming from the Southern Italian regions of Abruzzo, Molise, Campania, Apulia, Basilicata, Calabria, and Sicily, which were still mainly rural and agricultural and where much of the populace had been impoverished by centuries of foreign rule and the heavy tax burdens levied after unification of Italy in 1861. This period of large-scale immigration ended abruptly with the onset of World War I in 1914 and, except for one year (1922), never fully resumed, though many Italians managed to immigrate despite new quota-based immigration restrictions. Italian immigration was limited by several laws Congress passed in the 1920s, such as the Immigration Act of 1924, which was specifically intended to reduce immigration from Italy and other Southern European countries, as well as immigration from Eastern European countries, by restricting annual immigration per country to a number proportionate to each nationality's existing share of the U.S. population in 1920, as determined by the National Origins Formula (which calculated Italy to be the fifth-largest national origin of the U.S., to be allotted 3.87% of annual quota immigrant spots).

Following Italian unification, the Kingdom of Italy initially encouraged emigration to relieve economic pressures in Southern Italy. After the American Civil War, which resulted in over a half million killed or wounded, immigrant workers were recruited from Italy and elsewhere to fill the labor shortage caused by the war. In the United States, most Italians began their new lives as manual laborers in eastern cities, mining camps and farms. Italians settled mainly in the Northeastern U.S. and other industrial cities in the Midwest where working-class jobs were available. The descendants of the Italian immigrants steadily rose from a lower economic class in the first and second generation to a level comparable to the national average by 1970. The Italian community has often been characterized by strong ties to family, the Catholic Church, fraternal organizations, and political parties.

Ejemplos de uso de Italian American
1. Bush recognized one prominent Italian American, Gen.
2. His power is rooted in the continued ghettoization of the Italian–American community.
3. It encourages a hyphenated identity – think Italian–American – but insists on both sides of the hyphen.
4. He married an intelligent, supportive Italian–American, who pretty much filled the bill.
5. In America they do seem to have this idea that you are Italian–American, or Irish–American, she said.