IDEOLOGICAL CONFLICT IN AMERICAN POLITICAL CULTURE: THE DISCOURSE OF CIVIL SOCIETY AND AMERICAN NATIONAL NARRATIVES IN AMERICAN HISTORY TEXTBOOKS

1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 84-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Magnuson
2018 ◽  
pp. 172-178
Author(s):  
Robert C. McGreevey

While American political culture has long assumed that immigrants come from a world set apart, this book reframes our understanding of immigrants—demonstrating how many are actually migrants responding to U.S. influence in their home country and moving within the sphere of America’s world economic and political power. By showing how early U.S. colonialism in Puerto Rico gave rise to one of the largest migrations in modern American history, this study makes clear how U.S. involvement abroad not only affected foreign nations, but also fundamentally changed America itself.


2021 ◽  
pp. 136754942110557
Author(s):  
Alison Winch ◽  
Ben Little

In 2017, Facebook founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, travelled America with a former White House photographer who took pictures of him sharing meals with families, workforces and refugee communities. These were then posted to Zuckerberg’s Facebook page, usually with a post by Zuckerberg drawing attention to socioeconomic issues affecting different American communities. This article argues that Zuckerberg is mediated on this tour as a worthy populist contender to Donald Trump, albeit of a centrist, liberal, corporate kind. In particular, divisions along the lines of race, migration and class, which have been appropriated and emphasised by Trump, are apparently bridged and resolved through the representation of Zuckerberg, and the promotion of Facebook as a mediated fulcrum for civil society. Zuckerberg is pictured sharing food with, for example, Republican voters in Ohio and Somali migrants in Minnesota. We investigate how the differences projected between Zuckerberg and Trump pivot on the commodification of hospitality, particularly the mediation of shared meals, American hospitality, masculinity and ‘diversity work’. We contextualise this analysis within an understanding of how Silicon Valley’s monopoly capitalism perpetuates inequalities in its workforces and through its product design. We also attempt to make sense of the different social actors involved in Zuckerberg’s mediated ‘Year of Travel’, including the PR team, the people in the photographs, the commenters, as well as the users of Facebook. Through these contextualisations, we argue that this mediated contestation of hospitality – who is welcome in American society, who is not and why – is central to understanding the tensions in contemporary American political culture.


2018 ◽  
Vol 52 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-126
Author(s):  
William D. Adler

ABSTRACTThis article explores how the musical Hamilton can be used as a way to bring students to a new understanding of American government at the introductory level. As a recent pop-culture smash, Hamilton has brought to the fore the possibility of a new civic conversation about our political beginnings. With many citizens lacking a sufficient understanding of American political culture at this fraught time, the introductory American government course is the ideal place to enhance civic understanding. This article discusses how music from the Hamilton cast album, as well as videos about the show, were used during two semesters of the introductory American government course at a regional public university. Doing so encouraged discussion and active learning about key concepts and critical moments in American history that have shaped politics through the present day.


1964 ◽  
Vol 2 (5) ◽  
pp. 9-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth M. Stampp ◽  
Winthrop D. Jordan ◽  
Lawrence W. Levine ◽  
Robert L. Middlekauff ◽  
Charles G. Sellers ◽  
...  

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