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Civilization in the United States
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Civilization in the United States
From Arcadia Publishing Sc
Current price: $24.99
TARGET
Civilization in the United States
From Arcadia Publishing Sc
Current price: $24.99
Loading Inventory...
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About the Book A thoughtful and considered analysis and discussion of American culture and character. This 1888 work begins with a lengthy piece on Ulysses S. Grant - a figure of considerable fascination in the U.S., and relatively uninteresting to Arnolds fellow countrymen - Matthew Arnold lays a critical eye on the booming post-war nation. Book Synopsis Matthew Arnold begins his 1888 Civilization in the United States with a lengthy discourse on Ulysses S. Grant. Acknowledging that Grant, while wildly popular in the U.S., had received little attention in England--often over-shadowed by the more popular Robert E. Lee in commentary on the American Civil War--Arnold found Grant to be a rare man of virtue, a man able to confront and resist popular clamor. Arnold then goes on to provide A Word About America in which he confirms his belief that Americans are English people on the other side of the Atlantic. While understanding and foreshadowing the influence America will have in international relations, Arnold criticizes America for its sense of self-importance. He believes that Americans believe themselves to be better educated, more intellectual, and clearer thinking than other nations and that this belief will make the U.S. weak. Arnold also finds there to be a much greater need for public, social criticism (tall talk and self-gratification meets with hardly any rebuke from sane criticism) and that Americas inability to confront its own social issues will eventually undermine society. Arnold also provides a scathing critique of American newspapers. This thoughtful discussion of American culture and character reverberates with issues relevant to the modern world.