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Who are We Digital Only ed. [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 428 pages, height x width x depth: 248x159x57 mm, weight: 635 g, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Simon & Schuster Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0684870533
  • ISBN-13: 9780684870533
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 428 pages, height x width x depth: 248x159x57 mm, weight: 635 g, Illustrations
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Apr-2004
  • Izdevniecība: Simon & Schuster Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0684870533
  • ISBN-13: 9780684870533
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
In his seminal work "The Clash of Civilizations" and the "Remaking of World Order," Samuel Huntington argued provocatively and presciently that with the end of the cold war, "civilizations" were replacing ideologies as the new fault lines in international politics.His astute analysis has proven correct. Now Professor Huntington turns his attention from international affairs to our domestic cultural rifts as he examines the impact other civilizations and their values are having on our own country. America was founded by British settlers who brought with them a distinct culture including the English language, Protestant values, individualism, religious commitment, and respect for law. The waves of immigrants that later came to the United States gradually accepted these values and assimilated into America's Anglo-Protestant culture. More recently, however, national identity has been eroded by the problems of assimilating massive numbers of primarily Hispanic immigrants, bilingualism, multiculturalism, the devaluation of citizenship, and the "denationalization" of American elites. September 11 brought a revival of American patriotism and a renewal of American identity. But already there are signs that this revival is fading, even though in the post-September 11 world, Americans face unprecedented challenges to our security. "Who Are We?" shows the need for us to reassert the core values that make us Americans. Nothing less than our national identity is at stake. Once again Samuel Huntington has written an important book that is certain to provoke a lively debate and to shape our national conversation about who we are.\

Recenzijas

"A benchmark for informed speculation...a searching reflection on our global state."

Scholarly analysis of the American national identity as it has evolved over the centuries, the challenges it now faces, and the choices that lie ahead. Huntington (History/Harvard; The Clash of Civilizations, 1996, etc.) argues that Anglo-Protestant culture, traditions, and values and the principles of the American Creed-liberty, equality, law, individual rights-have made this country what it is. In recent decades he sees doctrines of multiculturalism and diversity elevating racial, ethnic, and gender over national identity, and an increased tendency of immigrants, especially Hispanics, to maintain dual identities rather than to assimilate. The result is an emerging bilingual, bicultural society fundamentally different from the one of the three previous centuries with its Anglo-Protestant, English-language core. Controversies over racial preferences, immigration, and an official language are, he notes, battles in a single war over national identity, with substantial elements of the country's elites in academia (himself not included), the professions, and the media on one side and the general public on the other. Huntington bolsters his analysis with impressive statistics, and he assembles persuasive examples to illustrate the changes he sees taking place. To the question of whether a nation lacking a cultural core can define itself by ideology alone-that is, can America be a coherent nation if the American Creed is its sole source of national identity?-his answer is a firm no. A nation's soul, he states, is determined by a common history, traditions, and culture. As to where we go from here, he sees the world entering a new age of religion, one in which the nation's ideological war with militant communism has been replaced by a religious and cultural war with militant Islam. He outlines three possible approaches to the country's role in the world: cosmopolitanism, in which the US welcomes the world, its ideas, its goods, and its people; imperialism, in which the US is the dominant component of a supranational empire reshapes the world; and nationalism, in which the US does not try to eliminate the social, political, and cultural differences between itself and other societies but seeks to preserve and strengthen its own defining qualities. Elites may favor cosmopolitanism or imperialism, but most Americans, Huntington says, are, like him, patriots committed to nationalism. A work of serious intent that is certain to arouse controversy. (Kirkus Reviews)

Foreword xv
PART I THE ISSUES OF IDENTITY
Chapter
1. The Crisis of National Identity
3(18)
Salience: Are the Flags Still There?
3 (5)
Substance: Who Are We?
8(4)
The Global Identity Crisis
12(5)
Prospects for American Identity
17(4)
Chapter
2. Identities: National and Other
21(16)
The Concept of Identity
21 (3)
Others and Enemies
24 (3)
Sources of Identity
27(1)
The False Dichotomy
28(9)
PART II AMERICAN IDENTITY
Chapter
3. Components of American Identity
37(22)
Change, Continuity, and Partial Truths
37 (1)
Settlers Before Immigrants
38(8)
More Than the Creed
46(3)
"No Attachment to Place"
49(4)
Race and Ethnicity
53(6)
Chapter
4. Anglo-Protestant Culture
59(22)
The Cultural Core
59(3)
"The Dissidence of Dissent"
62 (4)
The American Creed
66(3)
Individualism and the Work Ethic
69 (6)
Moralism and the Reform Ethic
75(6)
Chapter
5. Religion and Christianity
81(26)
God, the Cross, and America
81(2)
A Religious People
83(9)
Protestant America and Catholicism
92(11)
A Christian People 98 Civil Religion
103(4)
Chapter
6. Emergence, Triumph, Erosion
107(34)
The Fragility of Nations
107(2)
Creating an American Identity
109 (4)
National vs. Other Identities
113 (6)
Nation and Patriotism Triumphant
119 (18)
Fading Nationalism
137(4)
PART III CHALLENGES TO AMERICAN IDENTITY
Chapter
7. Deconstructing America: The Rise of Subnational Identities
141(37)
The Deconstructionist Movement
141 (5)
The Challenge to the Creed
146(12)
The Challenge to English
158(13)
The Challenge to the Core Culture
171(7)
Chapter
8. Assimilation: Converts,
Ampersands, and the Erosion of Citizenship
178(1)
Immigration With or Without Assimilation
178 (4)
Assimilation: Still a Success?
182(2)
Sources of Assimilation
184(1)
The Immigrants
185(7)
The Immigration Process
192 (7)
American Society: Americanization Is Un-American
199 (5)
Ampersands and Dual Citizenship
204(10)
Citizens and Noncitizens
214(6)
Alternatives to Americanization
220(1)
Chapter
9. Mexican Immigration and Hispanization
221(36)
The Mexican/Hispanic Challenge
221(1)
Why Mexican Immigration Differs
222(8)
How Mexican Assimilation Lags
230(14)
Individual Assimilation and Enclave Consolidation
244 (3)
The Hispanization of Miami
247(4)
The Hispanization of the Southwest
251(6)
Chapter
10. Merging America with the World
257(38)
The Changing Environment
257(1)
The Search for an Enemy
258(6)
Dead Souls: The Denationalization of Elites
264(9)
The Patriotic Public
273(3)
Diasporas, Foreign Governments, and American Politics
276(19)
PART IV RENEWING AMERICAN IDENTITY
Chapter
11. Fault Lines Old and New
295(41)
The Shaping Trends
295(1)
The Ending of Ethnicity
296(7)
Race: Constant, Blurring, Fading
303(6)
White Nativism
309(7)
Bifurcation: Two Languages and Two Cultures?
316 (8)
Unrepresentative Democracy: Elites vs. the Public
324(12)
Chapter
12. Twenty-first Century America: Vulnerability, Religion, and National Identity
336(31)
The Creed in an Age of Vulnerability
336 (4)
Americans Turn to Religion
340(15)
The Global Resurgence of Religion
355(2)
Militant Islam vs. America
357(5)
America in the World: Cosmopolitan, Imperial, and/or National?
362(5)
Notes 367 (44)
Index 411


STEVE DUNN has a special interest in the Royal Navy of the late Victorian, Edwardian and First World War eras. His books include biographies of Admirals Cradock (The Scapegoat) and Troubridge (The Coward?) and the story of the first British battleship, Formidable, to be sunk by a torpedo. He lives in Worcestershire and southwest France.