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European Journal of American Culture, 2004
The American invasion of Iraq in the spring of 2003 brought to the surface of public debate among European elites a robust anti-Americanism. The reaction to US unilateralism has been nourished by a complex of fears. Two in particular. The first fear has to do with the presumed economic and cultural Americanization of Europe.
Sérgio Fabbrini
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The American invasion of Iraq in the spring of 2003 brought to the surface of public debate among European elites a robust anti-Americanism. The reaction to US unilateralism has been nourished by a complex of fears. Two in particular. The first fear has to do with the presumed economic and cultural Americanization of Europe.
Sérgio Fabbrini
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American Pragmatism and American Psychoanalysis
The Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 2002The author compares American pragmatism with American psychoanalysis in an effort to place the existence of the many diverse schools and theories of psychoanalysis in a historical context. Pragmatism is seen as a theory of instrumentation or a collection of tools for accomplishing goals; it claims that many of our efforts to know and seek truth are ...
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Americanness and the “Other” Americans
National Review of Black Politics, 2020American identity has become a racialized norm that is primarily applied to those racially identified as White. We examine what it means to be an American from the perspective of racial and ethnic minorities who may not be viewed as prototypical Americans.
Stacey Greene +3 more
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The Anti-American as Americanizer: Revisiting the Anti-American Century in Germany
German Politics and Society, 2009This article contextualizes the recent debates about German and European anti-Americanism by highlighting the paradoxical nature of such sentiments. Using examples from the Weimar Republic, Nazi Germany, and the postwar period, this article shows that anti-Americanism arose less from divergent cultural trends and perceived "value gaps," as many recent ...
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Americanize the First American
2020A few months after the United States declared war on Germany in the summer of 1917, Gertrude Simmons Bonnin moved to Washington, D.C as the Society of American Indians had elected her secretary. Bonnin managed to juggle war work with advocacy for other causes, which quickly brought her into the orbit of politically active white women in the District ...
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THE 'AMERICANNESS' OF AMERICAN ART
Canadian Review of American Studies, 1987Helen A. Cooper. Winslow Homer Watercolors. New Haven: Yale University Press for the National Gallery of Art, 1986. 259 pp. Ulus. Helmut von Erffa and Allen Staley. The Paintings of Benjamin West. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1986. 600 pp. Illus. Winslow Homer's name is synonymous with images of American life in the later nineteenth century: his ...
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American Slavery, American Freedom, American Catholicism
Early American Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2012Scholars who focus on American Catholic history have not fully examined the relationship between slavery and Catholic identity in the United States. They have acknowledged that the Church tolerated—and even supported—the institution of slavery. Scholars have also explored the Catholic Church’s active opposition to the forces of abolitionism.
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Russian-American Dialogue on the American Revolution.
The William and Mary Quarterly, 1996Russian-American Dialogue on the American Revolution is the second volume to be published in the Russian-American Dialogues series. Written by some of the most highly respected Russian historians of our time, including Nikolai N. Bolkhovitonov, Gennadi P. Kuropiatnik, Boris M. Shpotov, and V. L.
J. Dane Hartgrove +2 more
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