Product Description
Could the promise of upward mobility have a dark side? In
Tensions in the American Dream, Melanie and Roderick Bush ask, how does a "nation of immigrants" pledge inclusion, yet marginalize so many citizens based on race, class, and gender? The authors consider the origins and development of the U.S. nation and empire; the founding principles of belonging, nationalism, and exceptionalism; and their lived reality.
Tensions in the American Dream also addresses the relevancy of nation to empire in the context of the historical world capitalist system. The authors ask, is the American Dream a reality only questioned by those unwilling or unable to achieve it? What is the "good life" and how is it particularly "American"?
About the Author
Melanie E. L. Bush is Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Adelphi University and author of
Everyday Forms of Whiteness: Understanding Race in a "Post-Racial" World, the second edition of
Breaking the Code of Good Intentions: Everyday Forms of Whiteness.
Roderick D. Bush (1945-2013) was Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at St. John's University, and the author of
The End of White World Supremacy: Black Internationalism and the Problem of the Color Line (Temple), which won the Paul Sweezy Marxist Sociology Book Award from the American Sociological Association, and
We Are Not What We Seem: Black Nationalism and Class Struggle in the American Century.
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