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This Violent Empire : The Birth of an American National Identity (New ed)

Part of the Published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture and the University of North Carolina Press series
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This Violent Empire traces the origins of American violence, racism, and paranoia to the founding moments of the new nation and the initial instability of Americans' national sense of self. Fusing cultural and political analyses to create a new form of political history, Carroll Smith-Rosenberg explores the ways the founding generation, lacking a common history, governmental infrastructures, and shared culture, solidified their national sense of self by imagining a series of ""Others"" (African Americans, Native Americans, women, the propertyless) whose differences from European American male founders overshadowed the differences that divided those founders.

These ""Others,"" dangerous and polluting, had to be excluded from the European American body politic.

Feared, but also desired, they refused to be marginalized, incurring increasingly enraged enactments of their political and social exclusion that shaped our long history of racism, xenophobia, and sexism.

Close readings of political rhetoric during the Constitutional debates reveal the genesis of this long history.

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£40.46 Save 10.00%
RRP £44.95
Product Details
0807872717 / 9780807872710
Paperback / softback
973.25
30/08/2012
United States
English
512 pages
156 x 235 mm, 739 grams