Guide to quality control, kaoru ishikawa, the asian productivity association, revised English edition, 1984, No. of pages: 226 (Available in Western Europe and North America from Unipub, New York)

1985 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. D. T. O'Connor
Author(s):  
Klaus Hödl

This chapter addresses two aspects of the socio-economic transformations which modernized Galicia in many respects — economic changes and nationalization of the social network — which permanently affected Jewish life in this Habsburg province. Both the economic and social aspects created such hardship for Jews that the effects were apparent internationally, in their massive emigration to western Europe and North America. Here, the chapter focuses on Vienna as one of the destinations of the Galician Jews, and on the special features of the city. It also discusses the ways in which the Galician Jews adjusted to the local culture and the methods the Viennese Jews used to help them acculturate. Although New York claimed the largest number of Galician Jewish emigrants between 1881 and 1910, the numbers choosing Vienna were not insignificant.


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