Footnotes.
[1] American Jewish Yearbook, volume 24, page 343.
[2] Yearbook, Vol. 22, pages 410–11.
[3] Social Discovery, p. 21.
[4] Sociology in its Psychological Aspects, p. 13.
[5] ibid., p. 94.
[6] Hobhouse: Morals in Evolution, p. 339.
[7] The Philosophical Review, 1912, vol. 21, p. 81.
[8] See Dennes: Method and Presuppositions of Group Psychology, especially Chap. IX.
[9] Page 115.
[10] Baldwin: Social and Ethical Interpretations, p. 248.
[11] Boaz: Mind of Primitive Man, p. 207.
[12] Matthew, 12:30.
[13] Allport: American Journal of Sociology, May 1924, p. 691.
[14] Bogardus: American Journal of Sociology, May 1924, p. 703.
[15] Lindeman: Social Discovery, p. 44.
[16] Lindeman: Social Discovery, p. 120.
[17] Davis: Psychological Interpretations of Society, p. 9.
[18] Cited in Elwood, p. 330.
[19] Ellwood, p. 330.
[20] Baldwin, p. 571.
[21] Lindeman, p. 136.
[22] Dennes: Method and Presuppositions of Group Psychology, p. 145.
[23] MacDougall: Group Mind, p. 12.
[24] Lindeman, p. 115.
[25] Singer, p. 10.
[26] Lindeman, p. 170.
[27] MacDougall: Group Mind, p. 78.
[28] MacDougall: Group Mind, p. 158.
[29] Dennes: Method and Presuppositions of Group Psychology, p. 120.
[30] Barker: Political Thought in England from Herbert Spencer to the Present Day.
[31] Singer: Mind as Behavior, chapter on The Man Without a Fellow.
[32] Baldwin: Social and Ethical Interpretations, p. 22.
[33] p. 30.
[34] Hart: The Survey, March 15, 1924.
[35] Platt: The Psychology of Social Life, p. 188.
[36] Baldwin, p. 462.
[37] Baldwin, p. 96.
[38] Singer: Modern Thinkers and Present Problems, p. 289.
[39] Miller: Races, Nations and Classes, p. 14.
[40] Baldwin, p. 61.
[41] Sumner: Folkways, p. 12.
[42] Ellwood, p. 159.
[43] Vincent: American Journal of Sociology, Jan. 1912, p. 471.
[44] ibid., p. 483.
[45] Gumplowitz, p. 176.
[46] Gumplowitz, p. 161.
[47] Friedman, p. 148.
[48] Miller: Races, Nations and Classes, p. 11.
[49] Miller, p. 135.
[50] Miller, p. 35–6.
[51]Shaw: “Saint Joan,” p. lvii.
[52] Shaw, p. lxi.
[53] Baldwin, p. 191, footnote.
[54] Vincent: American Journal of Sociology, p. 479.
[55] Lippman, p. 115.
[56] p. 15.
[57] p. 31.
[58] p. 99.
[59] Chapter 20.
[60] Greene: Foundations of American Nationality, p. 579.
[61] Fish: The Development of American Nationality, p. 2–15.
[62] Fish, p. 10.
[63] Greene, pp. 590–598.
[64] Cobb: Rise of Religious Liberty in America, p. 70.
[65] Mecklin: The Ku Klux Klan, p. 183.
[66] Susan L. Davis: Authentic History of the Ku Klux Klan.
[67] Ross: Overland Monthly, Feb. 1922.
[68] Miller: Races, Nations, and Classes, p. 44.
[69] Drachsler: Democracy and Assimilation, p. 29.
[70] A Jewish Chaplain in France, p. 214.
[71] Martin: The Behavior of Crowds.
[72] Mecklin: The Ku Klux Klan, p. 20.
[73] The Ku Klux Klan, p. 233.
[74] idem. p. 103.
[75] p. 108.
[76] p. 122.
[77] Ryan: Art., Intolerance, in Pub. Amer. Sociological Society, Vol. XVIII.
[78] Tannenbaum: Darker Phases of the South, p. 20.
[79] p. 15.
[80] p. 33.
[81] Bohn: American Journal of Sociology, Jan. 1925, pp. 385–407.
[82] p. 168.
[83] p. 110.
[84] Johnson: The Nation’s Business, July 1923, pp. 26–8.
[85] Ryan, p. 124.
[86] Ward: Proceedings of the American Sociological Society, Vol. XVIII.
[87] Ward, p. 145.
[88] The Nation, March 21, 1923.
[89] The Nation, February 28, 1923.
[90] Samuel: You Gentiles, p. 31.
[91] p. 175.
[92] Menorah Journal, November 1924, p. 425.
[93] The International Jew, p. 88.
[94] Vol. 2, p. 249.
[95] Vol. 4, pp. 50–1.
[96] Finot: Race Prejudice, p. 88.
[97] p. 221.
[98] p. 310.
[99] p. 317.
[100] Spargo: The Jew and American Ideals.
[101] The Nation, February 20, 1924.
[102] Friedman: Survival or Extinction, p. 110.
[103] Shailer: The Neighbor.
[104] Mecklin: The Ku Klux Klan, p. 125.
[105] Jewish Social Service Quarterly, Nov. pp. 19–21.
[106] Friedman: Survival or Extinction, p. 112.
[107] p. 121.
[108] p. 131.
[109] p. 134.
[110] The Nation, Feb. 20, 1924.
[111] Miller: Races, Nations and Classes, Chapter II, p. 36.
[112] p. 182.
[113] p. 97.
[114] p. 95.
[115] Beaulieu: Israel among the Nations.
[116] Democracy and Assimilation, Chapter IV.
[117] Friedman: Survival or Extinction, p. 140.
[118] p. 106.
[119] p. 166.
[120] p. 190.
[121] See Gamoran: Changing Conceptions in Jewish Education.
[122] Macaulay: Lays of Ancient Rome.
[123] The Nation, March 21, 1923.
[124] Zangwill: The Melting Pot, Act I.
[125] The Nation, April 11, 1923.
[126] Berkson: Theories of Americanization, p. 101.
[127] p. 98.
[128] p. 117.
[129] Dewey: Addresses and Proceedings of the Nat. Ed. Assn. Vol. LIV, p. 185.
[130] Drachsler: Democracy and Assimilation, p. 236.
[131] p. 188.
[132] p. 222.
[133] Miller: Races, Nations and Classes, p. 169.
[134] p. 186.
[135] Racial Pessimism, in Pub. Amer. Sociol. Soc. Vol. XVIII, p. 13.
[136] p. 14.
[137] Miller, p. 181.
[138] p. 191.