Rövid leírás:
America through Foreign Eyes is written for Americans by a foreigner who has lived, studied, worked and dealt with America for half a century. In these pages, Jorge G. Casta–eda seeks to reflect upon some of the more salient features of the country. He considers the observations of other foreigners, from Dickens to Naipaul, and identifies aspects of the U.S. that were not touched upon by these authors. As a former Foreign Minister of Mexico, Casta–eda brings a different viewpoint to issues ranging from purported American exceptionalism, uniformity, race and religion, culture, immigration, and the death penalty. Ultimately, he describes the United States’ arduous and successful road to modernity, and the construction of what can justly be called an American civilization.
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Hosszú leírás:
Do Americans care what foreigners think about the United States? This book makes the case that they should. In these pages, Jorge Casta–eda writes from his unique vantage point as a former Foreign Minister of Mexico who has lived, studied, and worked in America. He offers an impressionistic, analytical, and intuitive review of his experience in the country over the last half-century, and shows how foreigners can provide perspective on the United States’ true nature. Casta–eda brings a different viewpoint to issues ranging from purported American exceptionalism, uniformity, race and religion, culture, immigration, and the death penalty.
Visitors and analysts, from Dickens to Naipaul, have generally asked the right questions and described America’s most salient features and mysteries. But, they have not always followed through with answers and explanations. Casta–eda draws from his work with American civil society and government authorities to provide both insight and context. Americans have long seen their country as „exceptional,” standing outside of history, but by comparing its contemporary politics and culture with those of other countries, Casta–eda shows how increasing nationalism and nostalgia are actually making the US more like other countries.
Casta–eda admits that most Americans have never cared much about what a foreigner thinks about their country, but the dynamic is shifting. The outside world means more to the US than ever before, and Americans should care about what foreigners think since they are now so sensitive to what foreigners do. Since Trump’s election in 2016, American politics increasingly resemble those of Europe, Latin America, and parts of Asia, such that pining for a lost and glorious past is as American as it is British, Mexican, Chinese, or Italian. Now, the questions that serious, knowledgeable, and sympathetic foreigners address to Americans may be the ones Americans ask–or should ask–for themselves.
Casta–eda has made an important contribution to the difficult genre of analyzing the United States from an outsider’s perspective. Such work is rather challenging given the size of the country and the complexity of issues it faces.
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Tartalomjegyzék:
Introduction
Chapter 1: American uniformity and materialism
Chapter 2: American exceptionalism
Chapter 3: From American culture to American civilization
Chapter 4: American democracy
Chapter 5: The American sense of history, or the lack of it, and American humor
Chapter 6: The American economy, innovation , and technology
Chapter 7: Pragmatism and hypocrisy
Chapter 8: Liberalism, tolerance, and their discontents
Chapter 9: The unforgivable and incomprehensible



