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German Anti-Americanism in ContextCardiff University BerendseGJ{at}cardiff.ac.uk The anti-American rhetoric which suddenly emerged in Western Europes intellectual discourse during the showdown of the Second Gulf War in 20023 is more than a political act. The new patterns of antagonism are symptoms of a process of cultural emancipation that commenced in the 1990s. Surprisingly, the rationale behind the growing demise of the project of Americanization which dominated the Cold War is a critical examination of Europes entanglement in a postmodern culture industry and its global markets. In the aftermath of unification, Germanys cultural scene has been meticulously scrutinized by its own intellectuals, who perceived the cultural imperialism of the USA as a threat. To some extent based on anti-American traditions that originate in Germanys period of Romanticism, contemporary intellectuals are acting as the guardians of the cultural values of so- called Old Europe. However, it will be argued that the appraisal of the political and cultural intimacy of both continents will not only result in a schism but will also foster new and exciting transatlantic liaisons.
Key Words: Americanization in Europe Europe and the aftermath of 9/11 Germany and anti-Americanism globalization and the US culture industry Gulf War II
Journal of European Studies, Vol. 33, No. 3-4,
333-350 (2003) This article has been cited by other articles:
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