Fascination and misgivings : the United States in French opinion, 1870-1914

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Bibliographic Information

Fascination and misgivings : the United States in French opinion, 1870-1914

Jacques Portes ; translated by Elborg Forster

Cambridge University Press, 2000

Other Title

Fascination réticente

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 439-442) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Through the views of French travelers and diverse French studies about the United States, this book shows that the US took a pivotal place in French consciousness during the second half of the nineteenth century. The American landscape, skyscrapers, and the presence of Native and African Americans were puzzling and exotic to the French. At the same time, towns and industry were proof of an emerging economic power. Meanwhile, the French people found attractive models of social engineering in American society: schools and universities, the changing role of women, the emergence of the middle class. Even before World War I, the US found its place in French opinion, following trends that were to continue throughout the twentieth century: fascination and misgivings, attraction and repulsion.

Table of Contents

  • Preface Claude Fohlen
  • Introduction
  • Part I. The United States as Exoticism: 1. The journey
  • 2. At first sight
  • 3. Western
  • 4. Les Negres
  • 5. A 'manipulated and mechanized life'
  • Part II. Models from the United States: 6. A truly American democracy
  • 7. A political life without grandeur
  • 8. The new world of education
  • 9. La Belle Americaine
  • 10. From the Mormons to Americanism
  • 11. Social hell or social harmony?
  • Part III. The United States as Power: 12. Immigration: strength or weakness?
  • 13. Business
  • 14. And now, imperialism
  • 15. Is there a culture in the United States?
  • Conclusion
  • Selective bibliography
  • Index.

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