Princeton Area Alumni Association

Social Activities

This committee strives to organize and host events that appeal to a wide range of Princeton alumni. (More)

We have moved! Please go to our new site on tigernet, and update your bookmarks!

Comment on Post

0 (max 2000)
PAAA

RECAP First Friday Lunch - March 2014

                            Nimisha Barton discusses Gender and Immigration in early 20th Century France at First Friday Lunch at the Nassau Club

 

          Nimisha Barton, a finishing graduate student in the history department discussed her study of gender and immigration in France between 1900 and 1940, emphasizing the years 1914 to 1940, at the Nassau Club, 6 Mercer Street, Princeton, New Jersey, on March 7, 2014.

          Ms. Barton is from southern California. She received her undergraduate education at the University of California at Berkeley in 2006.

          During the period that she researched, France was the principal country receiving immigrants in Europe. The French were highly favorable to immigrants, especially immigrant women. Although a country with continuing high rates of immigration, the fact was not admitted publicly until the 1980s.

          Armenians were a significant immigrant group after World War I, because of war, the Turkish genocide, and economic problems. Jews fled pogroms in Eastern Europe. In addition, general upheaval in Europe following the Great War set Italians, Spaniards, Romanians, Russians and many others in motion across the continent during the interwar period.

          Several factors created favorable attitudes toward immigrants. France continued to face a decreasing birth rate, a challenge that had been recognized for many decades, and the consequent need for more workers, and the French continued to worry about the higher birth rates enjoyed by what were then their traditional enemies, the Germans. The relatively high birth rates for immigrants made them all the more desirable to the French. Indeed, their high birth rates were regarded as appropriate models for native French families.

          France was an early welfare state, and, thus state assistance importantly supplemented private efforts to aid immigrants. Immigrant men were well served by the system of social services, but there were even greater benefits for women immigrants. Support, such as family allowances and children’s summer camps, were among the entitlements. There was a strong support network, especially in Paris. Social workers and their organizations had a high commitment to helping immigrants.

           Although France became a multi-cultural nation, the native French tended to resist multiculturalism as a concept. Nevertheless, notwithstanding the official French stance toward their immigrants, many of them lived what might be termed "hyphenated" lives. What seems to have occurred was acculturation rather than total assimilation.

          As the depression deepened during the 1930s, immigrants became more visible to the French. What might be viewed as "disciplinary paternalism" evolved to force unmarried male immigrants into desired social patterns rather than allowing them to live rootless existences as wanderers.

          By the 1950s and 1960s immigrants came to be regarded as burdens for the French social services structure. Muslim immigrant women came to be viewed as barriers to assimilation, in part because of their dress that identifies them as immigrants. This view is not entirely new. At one time, Jewish immigrant women were noticed, owing to their often shabby clothing.

                     Immigrant Muslim women are now often regarded as barriers to assimilation for their families and themselves. But Nimisha Barton’s research suggests that this owes more to a shift in environmental factors – namely the end to fears of depopulation and the rise of fears of global overpopulation – as well as postcolonial legacies stemming from French entanglements in Algeria. If researchers were to study the networks of community and systems of state assistance that continue to play an important role in the lives of immigrant women and families, they may well uncover a more supportive story than that which is traditionally told.


Posted by lydia about 10 years ago.

More

Ballet in Lawrenceville

audree
This production has MANY Princeton connections.  Check out the Town Topics article

 
AMERICAN REPERTORY BALLET 
PRINCETON BALLET SCHOOL
Join us as we kick off an exciting year!
As August comes to a close, we are looking forward to kicking off American Repertory Ballet's 2014-2015 performance season.
We invite you to join us in the theatre this September!

To purchase tickets, click here, select the 20th as your preferred date, enter the number of tickets you would like to purchase at this discounted rate, and enter the promo code PA3 in the right column.
See ARB perform at Rider University in Lawrenceville

Saturday, September 20 at 7:30pm
followed by a
 special chance to meet that dancers after the performance!

Alice Cao and Cameron Auble-Branigan performing Trinette Singleton's Dreams Interrupted; Photo Credit: Leighton Chen

American Repertory Ballet returns to Rider University's Bart Luedeke Center this September to present its Fall Kick-Off Performance weekend.
Please join us for an evening of compelling, dynamic works, featuring a large range of movement styles, narrative voices, and musical genres.

ARB's Fall Kick-Off Performance will feature: Our Town (choreographed by Philip Jerry, Princeton class of '95)Fantasy BaroqueDreams Interrupted, and Confetti

Click here to learn more about this performance.

Tickets are $10 for a group of 10 or more.

Click here, select the 20th as your preferred date, enter the number of tickets you would like to purchase at this discounted rate, and enter the promo code PA3 in the right column.

-or-
Contact Alexis Branagan, Director of Marketing and PR at ARB and Princeton class of '11, to arrange tickets:
abranagan@arballet.org732-249-1254 x15

Below: photos of Philip Jerry's Our Town
Photo Credit: Leighton Chen, Princeton class of '66
    

 

Related Events

ARB Our Town $10 tickets ( Saturday, September 20, 2014 - 7:30 PM to 9:30 PM )
Location: Rider University

Posted by Princeton AAA about 10 years ago.

More

First Friday Lunch - September 5th, 2014 - Andrew Ledford/Dept of Sociology

Join us for First Fridays, a monthly recurring event for undergraduate and graduate Princeton alumni, graduate students, and parents.  On the first Friday of each month, area alumni and theiruests will meet to enjoy a prix fixe luncheon at the Nassau Club in downtown Princeton.  As a special bonus for PA3, a Princeton University PhD student will present his/her work to the group in this informal setting.  Topics vary monthly and are always interesting!  Have a look at this impressive roster of our past luncheon speakers.

In September, we will be joined by Andrew Ledford, a PhD student in the Department of Sociology.  Andrew will visit with us again to talk with us about his project on Iranian Studies.  

Specially priced at $25/person (or $30 if you choose not to pay PA3's annual dues), lunch includes the Nassau Club’s appetizer, main course and dessert as well as a complementary beverage (wine, beer, soft drink). Pre-registration is preferred.

>> Looking forward to seeing you...in your orange and black! <<

Date: Friday, September 5th, 2013
Time: 12 noon - 2 pm
Location: Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St, Princeton, NJ
Nassau Club membership is not necessary to attend this event.
Dress is business casual.

For more information, contact Lydia Zaininger '83.

Lunch Reservation
Azadi-tower-03
Related Events

First Friday Lunch ( Friday, September 5, 2014 - 12:00 PM to 2:00 PM )

Andrew Ledford, PhD student in the Department of Sociology, will join us again to update us on his work on Iran.

Location: Nassau Club, 6 Mercer St, Princeton
Cost: $25 PA3 dues-paying member/$30 others
Organized by: PA3

Posted by lydia about 10 years ago.

More

Welcome to New Graduate Students!

The Princeton Area Alumni Association (better known as "the PA3") would like to warmly welcome all incoming graduate students from the area to Princeton University, at an event held in one of Princeton's hallmark venues: The Nassau Inn's "Yankee Doodle Tap Room."

Have a drink on us, among other treats, and enjoy an informal introduction to our group and your new classmates.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Related Events

Welcome to New Graduate Students! ( Friday, August 29, 2014 - 4:00 PM to 6:00 PM )
Location: Yankee Doodle Tap Room
Organized by: PA3

Posted by Dan over 10 years ago.

More

PA3 Book Club

Hello PA3 community members!

I’m excited to announce that I, Linsay Hiller ’08, have volunteered to organize a PA3 Book Club. The club will be open to all ages and is intended to be a low-key, flexible club that will appeal to a variety of interests and backgrounds.

Please reach out to me directly at bookclub.admin@princetonaaa.org for more information and to express your interest in being a part of the club. I have prepared a tentative plan for the club, but I am open to any and all suggestions – this is meant to be a group effort and I’m looking forward to collaborating with the area’s many book lovers!

Meetings Schedule: The club will meet approximately six times a year, give or take.

Club Organization: For the time being, I will serve as the club’s manager and handle all organizational aspects. However, once the club is in motion, it is anticipated that the active members will work together to pick and schedule locations, books, and dates.

Meetings Organization: Each meeting will have a leader – ie. one person who has done some external research on the book, the author, the subject matter, the time period, etc. and will be able to lead the discussion and present questions and interesting discussion topics to the group. That being said, all participants are encouraged to come to the meeting with their own questions and interesting facts!

Book Selection: Books will be selected by popular vote. Participants in each meeting are encouraged, but not required, to bring to the meeting a suggested book to read for the following meeting. The participants in that meeting will then vote on the next book.

Suggested First Meeting: September 2nd at 7pm. The meeting location is TBD, but will likely be on Princeton’s campus or in town, depending on the group size.

Suggested First Book: The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho

Thanks so much and I look forward to hearing from the community!
Linsay





Related Events

PA3 Book Club Meeting ( Tuesday, September 2, 2014 - 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM )
Location: Princeton, NJ
Cost: Free
Organized by: Linsay Hiller '08

Posted by Dan over 10 years ago.

More