American nationality can still be taken for granted as a monolithic and self-contained whole, no matter how diverse and conflicted, if it remains implicitly defined by its internal social relations, and not in political struggles for power with other... Audiotopia: Music, Race, and America - Página 21por Josh Kun - 2005 - 319 páginasVista previa limitada - Acerca de este libro
| Amy Kaplan, Donald E. Pease - 1993 - 686 páginas
...American culture and leaves national borders intact instead of interrogating their formation. That is, American nationality can still be taken for granted...borders fluid, contested, and historically changing. By defining American culture as determined precisely by its diversity and multivocality, "America"... | |
| Gregory S. Jay - 1997 - 260 páginas
...American culture and leaves national borders intact instead of interrogating their formation. That is, American nationality can still be taken for granted...borders fluid, contested, and historically changing" (15). the Caribbean, though to do so would present the danger of repeating the history of colonial... | |
| Paul Allatson - 2002 - 372 páginas
...— and, it would seem, for not reading the USA's key political and legal documents — she warns: American nationality can still be taken for granted...borders fluid, contested, and historically changing, (ibid: 15) Kaplan demonstrates that if the US national imaginary is informed by the myth of national... | |
| Gesa Mackenthun - 2004 - 252 páginas
...American culture and leaves national borders intact instead of interrogating their formation. That is, American nationality can still be taken for granted...borders fluid, contested, and historically changing. (Kaplan 1993: 15) United States imperialism, in its manifestadon of westward expansion, has been the... | |
| Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy, Agatha Beins - 2005 - 368 páginas
...American culture and leaves national borders intact instead of interrogating their formation. That is, American nationality can still be taken for granted...geographic borders fluid, contested, and historically changing.6 Although multiculturalism might seem to challenge the mythos of exceptionalism by, for instance,... | |
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