"Drawing on an impressive and unprecedented array of Yiddish- and Italian-language sources, Zimmer details both the ideological connections and ethnocultural obstacles that supported and separated anarchist communities… Zimmer's research and scope is encyclopedic… Zimmer's fine book is indispensable."--The Journal of American History
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"Zimmer's archival research is impressive… a fascinating examination of the interplay of individuals of various ethnicities… involved with anarchism and its sympathizers in San Francisco."--International Review of Social History
"Drawing on an impressive and unprecedented array of Yiddish- and Italian-language sources, Zimmer details both the ideological connections and ethnocultural obstacles that supported and separated anarchist communities… Zimmer's research and scope is encyclopedic… Zimmer's fine book is indispensable."--The Journal of American History
"Drawing on an impressive and unprecedented array of Yiddish- and Italian-language sources, Zimmer details both the ideological connections and ethnocultural obstacles that supported and separated anarchist communities… Zimmer's research and scope is encyclopedic… Zimmer's fine book is indispensable."--The Journal of American History

