This provocative collection of essays adds a new dimension to our
understanding of nation-building through its examination of the role of
intimate cultural processes. First, by exploring the private lives of
migrants from Italy through biography, oral history, and ethnography,
these essays suggest why and how--across cultures--Italianness has come
to be associated with a particular kind of femininity and supposedly
distinctive elements of domestic life symbolized by long-held
stereotypes of the Italian mother. On a larger scale, while the editors
and contributors share with previous works on the Italian diaspora a
keen interest in the imagining of nations across national borders, here
they refocus our attention to the significance of the domestic,
particularly the lives of individual men and women, their families, and
the communities they loved--and left behind.