Andy Markovits
Autor/a de Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism
Sobre l'autor
Obres de Andy Markovits
Fear of science, trust in science : conditions for change in the climate of opinion (1980) 5 exemplars
The politics of west German trade unions : strategies of class and interest representation in growth and crisis (2016) 2 exemplars
Etiquetat
Coneixement comú
- Nom normalitzat
- Markovits, Andy
- Nom oficial
- Markovits, Andrei Steven
- Data de naixement
- 1948-10-06
- Gènere
- male
- Nacionalitat
- USA
- Lloc de naixement
- Timisoara, Romania
- Educació
- Columbia University
- Organitzacions
- The University of Michigan
Membres
Ressenyes
Potser també t'agrada
Estadístiques
- Obres
- 16
- Membres
- 173
- Popularitat
- #123,688
- Valoració
- 3.2
- Ressenyes
- 2
- ISBN
- 38
- Llengües
- 3
Markovits does well in describing anti-Americanism and demonstrating how it is directed more fundamentally at what America is rather than what America does. He is right in identifying the source of this prejudice as a resentment and envy of "Mr. Big" and relates it to perennial anxieties that Europe has had about the US since its inception. An especially interesting section described German identification with Native Americans in Karl May's writings and other German cultural artifacts. I grew up reading Karl May, so there were some really illuminating insights. Markovits is also great at pointing out European hypocrisy in straddling America with all the blame for globalization or corporate misdeed. The chapter on the relationship between anti-Semitism and anti-Americanism was especially fascinating, as it is not something I had really noticed, but the connection undoubtedly exists.
What I didn't enjoy all that much was the dry, academic tone of the book. Academic writing can be engaging, but there was just something languid and long-winded about the way the author articulated himself. What I'm trying to say is that I was often bored. It wasn't terribly well-written and could have used some editing. The book also felt a bit incomplete, like a collection of notes or essays didn't cohere in a very satisfying way. Because the last chapter was actually a separate essay, it repeated many previously stated points, which was annoying. The constant jabs at George W. Bush quickly got tiring, too, although there was truth to the fact that Bush intensified anti-American sentiment.
Uncouth Nation gets a 2.5 rating overall. It's a bit "meh" on some points, but there were enough interesting observations and good analyses to merit a rating in the ballpark of 3 stars. Ch. 4 is worth reading on its own, but I think the book could just have been condensed and published as a long magazine article. It's all right, verging on good.… (més)