History

American Identity: Politics and Culture

largely a cultural and social act.  I reject the notion that most people vote based on rational choices about their own self-interest.  Rather, I think most people take political stances and engage in political actions primarily as ways of defining and expressing themselves.  Loyalties to political parties, ideologies, and philosophies are largely a way for Americans to understand and present themselves as the people they want to be, and as the way they want to be perceived by others.

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Keepin’ it Rural

Today’s article is the first in a four-part series examining changes in rural America, American politics, and immigration. increase and immigration. Agricultural families typically had a higher birth rate than urban families because children provided valuable labor on the farm from an early age.  At the same time, rural America received its fair share of foreign immigrants.  While stereotypes of 19th and early 20th century immigration often focus on Irish, Italians, and Jews making new homes in American cities, waves of Germans, Scandinavians, Slavs, British, and many others passed right through those cities and continued on to the heartland.

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Wisconsin Hard Line Politics Spreads to Academia

historian in the United States is either currently, or has been at some point during their career, a member. Oh, and one more thing worth noting about Cronon.  He’s not an asshole.  You see, academia in some ways is no different than any other profession; there’s no shortage of ambitious, power-hungry, insecure, selfish, pompous wretches at the top.  But I’ve been in the field as a graduate student and a professor for almost twenty years now, and I’ve never heard anyone say anything bad about Cronon.  I don’t know him personally, but we move in similar circles, attend some of the same conferences, and have numerous mutual acquaintances.  Academia’s a very small world, and so far as I can tell, Cronon doesn’t just look the way you’d expect a professor would, with his beard, glasses, and underwhelming physique, but he also behaves the way you’d hope a professor would: with professionalism, patience, and kindness.

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Natural Disasters

1934 National Industrial Recovery Act, was inspired more by Mussolini’s corporatism than Keynes.  FDR’s overarching goal was to save capitalism from itself, not to destroy it. But you wouldn’t know that judging by what his critics said about him. Voices on the right such as The American Liberty League and Father Charles Coughlin lambasted the president.  They called him a socialist and claimed his programs were not just bad policy, but downright immoral.  Many critics framed their attack in moral terms because to them, government debt and most public expenditures on the poor were just that: immoral.  None other than former President Herbert Hoover railed against the New Deal as immoral and called for Americans to, “re-establish morals as the first objective of government.”

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In the Middle East Freedom Comes from Within

too soon, fundamentalist Islamists would gain power not only there, but throughout much of the region. The third face was the wizard, conniving behind the curtain.  Neo-Conservatives had developed a calculated strategy to rid the region of governments with a history of hostility toward us, a half-dozen former Soviet-client states leftover from the Cold War.  First Iraq, then Syria, eventually all the way to Iran.  Knock those dominos down one at a time if need be.

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Glenn Beck Your Future Awaits

concern now that some 300 sponsors have refused to advertise on Beck’s show?  It’s hard to know just yet, but the speculation has caused enough of a stir that the story has even hopped the pond and been picked up by The Guardian. Personally, I think Beck’s days are indeed numbered, not just at Fox News, but as an important national voice.  Indeed, I am fairly confident that within a year or two or three, and certainly not more than five, he will be largely marginalized, destined to become a head-scratcher in some future edition of Trivial Pursuit.

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Identity Politics in the 21st Century

In Tuesday’s post I offered a very brief historical overview of identity politics in America, from the Revolution up to the 1990s.  I made the case that they are nothing new, and I gently admonished the worry warts who had fretted that so-called hyphenated Americas were tearing apart America’s social fabric.  Today, with tongue partly in cheek, I offer a personal interpretation of American identity politics here in

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