1st Edition

Images of America A Political, Industrial and Social Portrait

Edited By R.L. Bruckberger Copyright 2009
    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    301 Pages
    by Routledge

    "Either America is the hope of the world, or it is nothing. Th ere are those who have begun to despair of the West. It is for them that I am writing." Bruckberger's book has been compared by many to Tocqueville's Democracy in America. In both works, Americans see themselves through the sympathetic, sometimes critical eyes of a Frenchman. Bruckberger, as chaplain general of the French Resistance during World War II, was a scholar who lived a life of action, and a priest who knew the life of the spirit. He begins with a celebration of the American past, but also off ers a clear warning for the future.

    The book was written after Bruckberger's eight years in the United States, during which he thought deeply about the country, and came to love and admire it. He sees what others have not, and his heroes are, in most instances, not the ones normally chosen. As seen from the perspective of the old Europe, the ideas and ideals that have shaped the history and character of America, take on a new meaning. The result is an image of America that is as enlightening as it is surprising.

    Bruckberger believes America brings to the Western heritage an essential spark, one vital for the angry and perilous post-World War II world, and one equally important today. That is America's regard for the individual, for the non-abstract, living human being. This theme, contrasted with what Bruckberger sees as the heresy of Europe--the subordination of human beings to abstraction— is developed with wit and insight.

    I: The Political Revolution; 1: Montaigne and the Cannibals; 2: Tabula Rasa and Utopia; 3: Magna Charta and the Word of God; 4: The Pride of Being English; 5: The War; 6: Independence; 7: The National Vocation; 8: Thomas Jefferson and Saint-Just; 9: Sparta, Rome, the Land of Cockaigne, or Tartary; 10: The Declaration of Independence; 11: Congress and the Declaration; 12: The American Revolution; II: The Industrial and Social Revolution; 13: Once More Montaigne—but Other Cannibals; 14: Jefferson against Hamilton; 15: Karl Marx, America, and the Hippocratic Oath; 16: “The Chapter of the Hats”; 17: “The Only American Economist of Importance”; 18: The Prophet of a New Messiah; 19: A Trial of Orthodoxy; 20: Samuel Gompers and Lenin—“More-and-More” and “All-or-Nothing”

    Biography

    R.L. Bruckberger