Theories of Americanization
Author | : Isaac Baer Berkson |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 1920 |
Genre | : Americanization |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : Isaac Baer Berkson |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 1920 |
Genre | : Americanization |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Isaac Baer Berkson |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 248 |
Release | : 1920 |
Genre | : Americanization |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Robert Seltzer |
Publisher | : NYU Press |
Total Pages | : 492 |
Release | : 1995-02 |
Genre | : Religion |
ISBN | : 0814780016 |
Assesses the current state of American Jewish life, drawing on the research and thinking of scholars from a variety of disciplines and diverse points of view.
Author | : Timothy W. Luke |
Publisher | : Telos Press, Limited |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2011 |
Genre | : Critical theory |
ISBN | : 9780914386452 |
Author | : Elizabeth Lunbeck |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 330 |
Release | : 2014-03-10 |
Genre | : Psychology |
ISBN | : 0674727134 |
American social critics in the 1970s, convinced that their nation was in decline, turned to psychoanalysis for answers and seized on narcissism as the sickness of the age. Books indicting Americans as greedy, shallow, and self-indulgent appeared, none more influential than Christopher Lasch’s famous 1978 jeremiad The Culture of Narcissism. This line of critique reached a crescendo the following year in Jimmy Carter’s “malaise speech” and has endured to this day. But as Elizabeth Lunbeck reveals, the American critics missed altogether the breakthrough in psychoanalytic thinking that was championing narcissism’s positive aspects. Psychoanalysts had clashed over narcissism from the moment Freud introduced it in 1914, and they had long been split on its defining aspects: How much self-love, self-esteem, and self-indulgence was normal and desirable? While Freud’s orthodox followers sided with asceticism, analytic dissenters argued for gratification. Fifty years later, the Viennese émigré Heinz Kohut led a psychoanalytic revolution centered on a “normal narcissism” that he claimed was the wellspring of human ambition, creativity, and empathy. But critics saw only pathology in narcissism. The result was the loss of a vital way to understand ourselves, our needs, and our desires. Narcissism’s rich and complex history is also the history of the shifting fortunes and powerful influence of psychoanalysis in American thought and culture. Telling this story, The Americanization of Narcissism ultimately opens a new view on the central questions faced by the self struggling amid the tumultuous crosscurrents of modernity.
Author | : Richard D. Alba |
Publisher | : Harvard University Press |
Total Pages | : 388 |
Release | : 2009-06-30 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9780674020115 |
In this age of multicultural democracy, the idea of assimilation--that the social distance separating immigrants and their children from the mainstream of American society closes over time--seems outdated and, in some forms, even offensive. But as Richard Alba and Victor Nee show in the first systematic treatment of assimilation since the mid-1960s, it continues to shape the immigrant experience, even though the geography of immigration has shifted from Europe to Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Institutional changes, from civil rights legislation to immigration law, have provided a more favorable environment for nonwhite immigrants and their children than in the past. Assimilation is still driven, in claim, by the decisions of immigrants and the second generation to improve their social and material circumstances in America. But they also show that immigrants, historically and today, have profoundly changed our mainstream society and culture in the process of becoming Americans. Surveying a variety of domains--language, socioeconomic attachments, residential patterns, and intermarriage--they demonstrate the continuing importance of assimilation in American life. And they predict that it will blur the boundaries among the major, racially defined populations, as nonwhites and Hispanics are increasingly incorporated into the mainstream.
Author | : David Haney |
Publisher | : Temple University Press |
Total Pages | : 0 |
Release | : 2008-10-15 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 9781592137145 |
A highly readable introduction to and overview of the postwar social sciences in the United States, The Americanization of Social Science explores a critical period in the evolution of American sociology’s professional identity from the late 1940s through the early 1960s. David Paul Haney contends that during this time leading sociologists encouraged a professional secession from public engagement in the name of establishing the discipline’s scientific integrity. According to Haney, influential practitioners encouraged a willful withdrawal from public sociology by separating their professional work from public life. He argues that this separation diminished sociologists’ capacity for conveying their findings to wider publics, especially given their ambivalence towards the mass media, as witnessed by the professional estrangement that scholars like David Riesman and C. Wright Mills experienced as their writing found receptive lay audiences. He argues further that this sense of professional insularity has inhibited sociology’s participation in the national discussion about social issues to the present day.
Author | : Jan Stievermann |
Publisher | : Penn State Press |
Total Pages | : 294 |
Release | : 2015-06-26 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0271063009 |
Through innovative interdisciplinary methodologies and fresh avenues of inquiry, the nine essays collected in A Peculiar Mixture endeavor to transform how we understand the bewildering multiplicity and complexity that characterized the experience of German-speaking people in the middle colonies. They explore how the various cultural expressions of German speakers helped them bridge regional, religious, and denominational divides and eventually find a way to partake in America’s emerging national identity. Instead of thinking about early American culture and literature as evolving continuously as a singular entity, the contributions to this volume conceive of it as an ever-shifting and tangled “web of contact zones.” They present a society with a plurality of different native and colonial cultures interacting not only with one another but also with cultures and traditions from outside the colonies, in a “peculiar mixture” of Old World practices and New World influences. Aside from the editors, the contributors are Rosalind J. Beiler, Patrick M. Erben, Cynthia G. Falk, Marie Basile McDaniel, Philip Otterness, Liam Riordan, Matthias Schönhofer, and Marianne S. Wokeck.
Author | : William Edward Nelson |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 301 |
Release | : 1994-01-01 |
Genre | : Law |
ISBN | : 0820315877 |
Americanization of the Common Law remains one of the standard works on the transformation of law in America from the late colonial period to the end of the early republic. In a straightforward manner, William E. Nelson analyzes the profound ideological movement that grew out of the American Revolution and caused substantial structural change in the legal and social order of Massachusetts and, by extension, in the nation at large. The Revolution, Nelson argues, transformed a hierarchical and communitarian legal and social order into an egalitarian and individualistic one. For this edition, Nelson has written a new preface in which he discusses the book's initial reception and the relevant historiographical issues that have arisen since it was first published in 1975.
Author | : Neil Campbell |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 336 |
Release | : 2004 |
Genre | : Europe |
ISBN | : |
This textbook offers students an interdisciplinary and theoretically informed understanding of the cultural processes of Americanisation.