Culture and Democracy in the United StatesIn his new introduction, Whitfield sets the scene of the early twentieth century to show what inspired Horace Kallen to write this book. He delves deeply into his background, discussing the influences on Kallen's life and work. Whitfield also examines the many changes that have occurred since Culture and Democracy in the United States was first written, and reveals that many of the ideas espoused by Kallen have become reality. |
Contents
ix | |
POSTSCRIPTCULTURE AND THE KU KLUX | 1 |
A MEANING OF AMERICANISM | 36 |
DEMOCRACY VERSUS THE MELTINGPOT | 59 |
AMERICANIZATION AND THE CULTURAL | 118 |
THE NEWEST REACTION | 225 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Alain Locke alien Ameri American ancestry Anglo-Saxon arts assimilation association become character church citizens civilization conscious continuity coöperation cultural pluralism Culture and Democracy Declaration democracy democratic diversity doctrine economic emotion England English ethnic Europe European existence fact fear feeling foreign Frank Norris freedom German habit Harvard higher superstition human hyphen ideal immigrant individual industrial institutions intellectual Irish Israel Zangwill James Jewish Jews Kallen Papers Cincinnati Klan Ku Klux Klan labor land less liberty living Madison Grant Mary Antin mass melting pot ment mind moral Multiculturalism Nathan Glazer native nature Norman Hapgood organization passion pattern persons philosophy pioneer political population Press Puritan race racial religion religious Santayana sentiment sion social society spirit spontaneous T. S. Eliot things thought tion tive tradition ture Union United unity York Zangwill Zionism
Popular passages
Page xvii - Men may change their clothes, their politics, their wives, their religions, their philosophies, to a greater or lesser extent: they cannot change their grandfathers.
References to this book
Multicultural Citizenship: A Liberal Theory of Minority Rights Will Kymlicka No preview available - 1996 |