Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 240
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-0-7425-2197-1 • Hardback • August 2002 • $145.00 • (£112.00)
978-0-7425-2198-8 • Paperback • August 2002 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Everett Helmut Akam is professor of history at Casper College.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Truth and Consequences
Chapter 3 Transnational America versus the Melting Pot
Chapter 4 Horace Kallen and the Community of Consumption
Chapter 5 John Collier and the Red Atlantis
Chapter 6 Merger without Fusion: Alain Locke's Cosmopolitan Pluralism
Chapter 7 The Eclipse of Cultural Pluralist Thought
Chapter 8 Epilogue: The Civil Rights Movement as Beloved Community
Well organized. Recommended. . . . Excellent for graduate students and above.
— Choice Reviews
Looking to a neglected past, Everett Akam offers a richer perspective on the tensions between diversity and community than that afforded by contemporary 'identity politics' and its critics. Carefully recovering the insights of an earlier generation of 'cultural pluralists,' he evokes a compelling vision of difference within unity which promised an American identity that averted the perils of both stifling homogeneity and divisive separatism.
— Robert Westbrook, professor of history, University of Rochester; author of John Dewey and American Democracy
Akam weaves a fascinating thesis from the diverse strands of thought in our European/colonial/frontier development. Questioning why we have not created a transnational culture and insist on some form of isolation or absorption, he clarifies some of the major conceptual problems we share today. A brilliant analysis of our society as a quasi-culture.
— Vine Deloria Jr., author of Red Earth, White Lies: Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact, God is Red: A Native View of Religion, and many others
Confounding the standard academic division of labor, Akam blends the intellectual histories of pragmatism, ethnicity and race into a highly original synthesis organized around the concept of cultural pluralism. Rejecting both tribalism and universalism, he calls for an ideal of diversity in unity that respects the irreducible particularity of distinct cultures while still maintaining a common national culture capable of uniting people across their local cultural communities. Akam's powerful, concluding tribute to the Civil Rights Movement as the most significant, if short-lived, historical embodiment of this pluralist ideal should serve as the starting point for all future discussions of multiculturalism in America.
— Christopher Shannon, author of A World Made Safe For Differences: Cold War Intellectuals and the Politics of Identity
This book is most valuable for its examination of Locke in context.
— Journal of American History
Akam's Transnational America captures better than any previous work the philosophical aspirations of the early-twentieth century cultural pluralists. Bourne, Kallen, Collier, and Locke emerge here not only as critics of the 'melting-pot ideal,' but as thinkers engaged with the most vital issues of modernity. Their inquiry into the nature of truth, values, selfhood, and community in a pluralistic universe has much to offer the contemporary debate about ethno-racial diversity and U.S. national identity. There's wisdom in this book.
— Casey Nelson Blake, Columbia University