What they saw in America : Alexis de Tocqueville, Max Weber, G.K. Chesterton, and Sayyid Qutb

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Where to find it

Davis Library (5th floor)

Call Number
E169.1 .N725 2016
Status
Available

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Summary

Grounded in the stories of their actual visits, What They Saw in America takes the reader through the journeys of four distinguished, yet very different foreign visitors - Alexis de Tocqueville, Max Weber, G. K. Chesterton and Sayyid Qutb - who traveled to the United States between 1830 and 1950. The comparative insights of these important outside observers (from both European and Middle Eastern countries) encourage sober reflection on a number of features of American culture that have persisted over time - individualism and conformism, the unique relationship between religion and capitalism, indifference toward nature, voluntarism, attitudes toward race, and imperialistic tendencies. Listening to these travelers' views, both the ambivalent and even the more unequivocal, can help Americans better understand themselves, more fully empathize with the values of other cultures, and more deeply comprehend how the United States is perceived from the outside.

Contents

  • 1 Introduction
  • 2 Pride, patriotism, and the mercantilist spirit: Tocqueville and Beaumont discover America
  • 3 Tocqueville and the quandary of American democracy
  • 4 Agrarianism, race, and the end of romanticism: Weber in early twentieth-century America
  • 5 Weber on sects, schools, and the spirit of capitalism
  • 6 A new Martin Chuzzlewit: Chesterton on main street
  • 7 Chestertonian distributism and the democratic ideal
  • 8 From Musha to New York: Qutb encounters American jahiliyya
  • 9 Qutb's 'inquiring eyes' in Colorado and California
  • 10 Conclusion

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