America in Italian Culture

America in Italian Culture
Author: Guido Bonsaver
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023
Genre: America
ISBN: 0192589245

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When Italy unified in 1861, America was emerging as a world power, and advances in communication allowed Italians a view of American life to which they could aspire. 'America in Italian Culture' traces this huge cultural shift, looking at how US fiction, comics, music, and film came to dominate Italian culture, even as the countries went to war.

Italy and the USA

Italy and the USA
Author: Guido Bonsaver,Alessandro Carlucci,Matthew Reza
Publsiher: Italian Perspectives
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022-07-25
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 1781888760

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This collection takes a cross-disciplinary, transnational approach and gathers together essays from a range of subjects including linguistics, film studies, folk music, oral and written narrative, and history, which provide new comparative perspectives on the questions surrounding the mutual influence between Italian and U.S. cultures. The volume also showcases new research - quantitative, interpretative, and archival - which contributes to the study of cultural contact. It therefore offers new evidence to answer a question which has long been pivotal in various disciplines and research fields (from historical linguistics to cultural anthropology) - namely, how and to what extent cultural contact can affect long-term historical change?

Italian Culture

Italian Culture
Author: Peter Dorato,Sylvia Dorato
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2001
Genre: Italian Americans
ISBN: 1889335258

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Americas in Italian Literature and Culture 1700 1825

Americas in Italian Literature and Culture  1700 1825
Author: Stefania Buccini
Publsiher: Penn State Press
Total Pages: 246
Release: 2010-11-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780271041193

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Italian Americans

Italian Americans
Author: Eric Martone
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 792
Release: 2016-12-12
Genre: History
ISBN: 9798216105596

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The entire Italian American experience—from America's earliest days through the present—is now available in a single volume. This wide-ranging work relates the entire saga of the Italian-American experience from immigration through assimilation to achievement. The book highlights the enormous contributions that Italian Americans—the fourth largest European ethnic group in the United States—have made to the professions, politics, academy, arts, and popular culture of America. Going beyond familiar names and stories, it also captures the essence of everyday life for Italian Americans as they established communities and interacted with other ethnic groups. In this single volume, readers will be able to explore why Italians came to America, where they settled, and how their distinctive identity was formed. A diverse array of entries that highlight the breadth of this experience, as well as the multitude of ways in which Italian Americans have influenced U.S. history and culture, are presented in five thematic sections. Featured primary documents range from a 1493 letter from Christopher Columbus announcing his discovery to excerpts from President Barack Obama's 2011 speech to the National Italian American Foundation. Readers will come away from this book with a broader understanding of and greater appreciation for Italian Americans' contributions to the United States.

America in Italian Culture

America in Italian Culture
Author: Guido Bonsaver
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 575
Release: 2024-02-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780198849469

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When America began to emerge as a world power at the end of the nineteenth century, Italy was a young nation, recently unified. The technological advances brought about by electricity and the combustion engine were vastly speeding up the capacity of news, ideas, and artefacts to travel internationally. Furthermore, improved literacy and social reforms had produced an Italian working class with increased time, money, and education. At the turn of the century, if Italy's ruling elite continued the tradition of viewing Paris as a model of sophistication and good taste, millions of lowly-educated Italians began to dream of America, and many bought a transatlantic ticket to migrate there. By the 1920s, Italians were encountering America through Hollywood films and, thanks to illustrated magazines, they were mesmerised by the sight of Manhattan's futuristic skyline and by news of American lifestyle. The USA offered a model of modernity which flouted national borders and spoke to all. It could be snubbed, adored, or transformed for one's personal use, but it could not be ignored. Perversely, Italy was by then in the hands of a totalitarian dictatorship, Mussolini's Fascism. What were the effects of the nationalistic policies and campaigns aimed at protecting Italians from this supposedly pernicious foreign influence? What did Mussolini think of America? Why were jazz, American literature, and comics so popular, even as the USA became Italy's political enemy? America in Italian Culture provides a scholarly and captivating narrative of this epochal shift in Italian culture.

Guido Culture and Italian American Youth

Guido Culture and Italian American Youth
Author: Donald Tricarico
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2018-12-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783030032937

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From Saturday Night Fever to Jersey Shore, Italian American youth in New York City have appropriated—and been appropriated by—popular American culture. Here, Donald Tricarico investigates how Italian ethnicity has been used to fashion Guido as a distinct youth style that signals inclusion in popular American culture and, simultaneously, the making of a new ethnic subject. Emerging from a wave of Italian immigration after World War II in outer borough neighborhoods such as Bensonhurst, the story of the Guido is an Italian American story, symbolizing the negotiation of a negatively privileged ethnicity within American society. Tricarico takes up questions about the definition of Guido, the role of disco, and the identity politics of Jersey Shore in order to reconsider the significance of Guido for the study of Italian American ethnicity.

Oral History Oral Culture and Italian Americans

Oral History  Oral Culture  and Italian Americans
Author: Luisa Del Giudice
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2009
Genre: America
ISBN: 9780230620032

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This book introduces readers to a wide range of interpretations that take oral history and folklore as the premise with a focus on Italian and Italian American culture in disciplines such as history, ethnography, memoir, art, and music.