When, in September 1971, I published The Distant Magnet,
I planned a personal synthesis, supplemented by small pieces of my own
research. I
was not taking up a position in any controversy, nor was I engaging in
polemic with any other scholar. Yet I did intend some change of emphasis,
and in particular I wanted to stress Europe more than anyone had done
since Marcus Hansen. I sought realism in the description of travel
conditions, rather than dwelling on the wholly exceptional horrors of
1847. I demonstrated how foreign was America's working class. I stressed
the American conditions common to all immigrants, rather than the
differences between ethnic groups. I showed how British capitalism,
supplemented by that of France, Belgium, and, later, Germany, opened up
overseas areas and at the same time undermined, further and further
eastwards, Europe's peasant economies. I had in mind the impact of
factory competition and railway construction in eroding the secondary
occupations on which so many peasants depended. In other words, I
asserted that the modernization of a small corner of Europe was
responsible, to use old-fashioned language, for both “push”
and
“pull.”
To restrict length, and to acknowledge my own shortcomings, I omitted
the Colonial period, and also all Hispanic and Oriental migrations –
and,
of course, before World War II these latter were not very big.