'American studies' or 'American civilization' is an
interdisciplinary field dealing with the study of the
United States. It incorporates the study of
economics,
history,
literature,
art,
the media,
film,
urban studies,
women's studies, and
culture of the United States, among other fields.
''American civilization'' may also mean the
United States, and its culture and people.
Founding notions
Vernon Louis Parrington is often cited as the founder of American studies for his
Pulitzer Prize-winning ''Main Currents in American Thought'', which combines the methodologies of
literary criticism and historical research. In the introduction to ''Main Currents in American Thought'', Parrington described his field:
: I have undertaken to give some account of the genesis and development in American letters of certain germinal ideas that have come to be reckoned traditionally American--how they came into being here, how they were opposed, and what influence they have exerted in determining the form and scope of our characteristic ideals and institutions. In pursuing such a task, I have chosen to follow the broad path of our political, economic, and social development, rather than the narrower belletristic.
The "broad path" that Parrington describes formed a scholastic course of study for
Henry Nash Smith, who received a Ph.D. from
Harvard's interdisciplinary program in "History and American Civilization" in 1940, setting an academic precedent for present-day American Studies programs.
The first signature methodology of American studies was the "myth and symbol" approach, developed in such foundational texts as Smith's ''Virgin Land'' and
Leo Marx's ''The Machine in the Garden.'' Myth and symbol scholars claimed to find certain recurring themes throughout American texts that served to illuminate a unique American culture. Later scholars such as
Annette Kolodny and
Alan Trachtenberg re-imagined the myth and symbol approach in light of multicultural studies.
Beginning in the 1960s and 70s, earlier approaches were criticized for continuing to promote the idea of
American exceptionalism -- the notion that the US has had a special mission and virtue that makes it unique among nations. Several generations of American Studies scholars have critiqued this ethnocentric view, and have focused critically on issues of race, ethnicity, gender and sexuality, and transnational concerns.
Institutionally, in the last decade the American Studies Association has reflected the increasingly interdisciplinary nature of the field, creating particularly strong connections to other interdisciplines such ethnic studies, gender studies, cultural studies and post- or de-colonial studies. Another major theme of the field in recent years has been internationalization -- the recognition that much vital scholarship about the US and its relations to the wider global community has been and is being produced outside the United States.
American Studies outside of the U.S.
Following
World War II and during the
Cold War, the U.S. government promoted the study of the United States in several European countries, helping to endow chairs in universities and institutes in American history, politics and literature in the interests of cultural diplomacy. Many scholars and governments in Europe also recognized the need to study the U.S. The field has become especially prominent in Britain and Germany.
Richard Pells, a historian, concludes that 'the American Studies movement in Europe... did not result in a transplantation of American values. Instead, European scholars used American Studies for their own purposes, reinterpreting American history and literature in terms that were relevant to European problems. In the end, American Studies became a lens through which Europeans could more clearly see and understand themselves'.
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For many years, strong critiques from within the field have been leveled against the political abuse of "American Studies" as an arm of US foreign policy. This has premitted far richer and more skeptical interactions with the field around the world. Currently vital American Studies work from outside the US, especially in the Global South, is playing an ongoing role in limiting US ethnocentrisim and understanding the negative impact of American political and cultural imperialism.
In Australia, American Studies has come under intense criticism with the development of a US Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. This center has been explicitly set up to counter an anti-US Foreign policy sentiment found in the Australian public.
See
American Studies in Britain and
American Studies in Germany.
European centres for American studies include the
Center for American Studies in
Brussels,
Belgium and most notably the John F. Kennedy-Institute in Berlin, Germany. Other centers for American Studies in Germany include the Bavarian America-Academy, the
Heidelberg Center for American Studies (HCA) and the Zentrum für Nordamerikaforschung in Frankfurt (ZENAF). Founded in 1992, the Center for American Studies at the
University of Southern Denmark now offers a graduate program in American Studies. In the Netherlands the University of Amsterdam, the University of Leiden, the Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, and the Rijksuniversiteit Groningen also offer a graduate program in American Studies.
Further reading
★ ''Locating American Studies: The Evolution of a Discipline'', edited by Lucy Maddox, Johns Hopkins University Press 1998, ISBN 0-8018-6056-3
★ ''The Futures of American Studies'', edited by Donald E. Pease and Robyn Wiegman, Duke University Press 2002, ISBN 0-8223-2965-4
★ ''American Studies in a Moment of Danger'', George Lipsitz, University of Minnesota Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8166-3949-3
Associations and scholarly journals
The
American Studies Association was founded in 1950. It publishes ''American Quarterly'', which has been the primary outlet of American Studies scholarship since 1949. The
British Association for American Studies supports
American Studies in Britain and publishes the ''Journal of American Studies''. [''American Studies'' http://www2.ku.edu/~amerstud/], sponsored by the Mid-America American Studies Association, is, alongside ''American Quarterly'', the second major American Studies journal
There are now
American Studies programs and associations around the world.
See also
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Academic discipline
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American culture
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American history
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American literature
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American Studies in Britain
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American Studies in Germany
External links
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How the World Sees America
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American Studies Crossroads Project
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British Association for American Studies
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Encyclopedia of American Studies
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The American Studies Association
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''American Quarterly'' at Project Muse
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Theory and Method Resources, T. V. Reed, Washington State University
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Homepage of the Heidelberg Center for American Studies Heidelberg Center for American Studies
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US Studies Centre, University of Sydney
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United States Studies Centre (Sydney) Watch
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American Studies with a "Mexican" accent: ''Tex(t)-Mex'' book ''Tex(t)-Mex'' galleryblog