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The World Reimagined : Americans and Human Rights in the Twentieth Century

Part of the Human Rights in History series
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Concerns about rights in the United States have a long history, but the articulation of global human rights in the twentieth century was something altogether different.

Global human rights offered individuals unprecedented guarantees beyond the nation for the protection of political, economic, social and cultural freedoms.

The World Reimagined explores how these revolutionary developments first became believable to Americans in the 1940s and the 1970s through everyday vernaculars as they emerged in political and legal thought, photography, film, novels, memoirs and soundscapes.

Together, they offered fundamentally novel ways for Americans to understand what it means to feel free, culminating in today's ubiquitous moral language of human rights.

Set against a sweeping transnational canvas, the book presents a new history of how Americans thought and acted in the twentieth-century world.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521829755 / 9780521829755
Hardback
12/09/2016
United Kingdom
English
320 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
23 cm
academic/professional/technical Learn More