‚E pluribus unum’ or ‚E pluribus plura’?

Unity and Diversity in American Culture



The essays collected in this volume are derived from the 2008 EAAS biennial conference in Oslo. They explore the many-layered pluralism of American life by addressing questions like the following: How does the United States negotiate the inner tensions that, because of its constitutive diversity, might threaten its unity? How do traditions, modes of consensus building, the feeling of a wished-for common good counteract potential strife and the tensions of particular interests and particular groups? Could it be that there are indeed several Americas? Is being an American necessarily being in many ways double? Can the politically unifying, centripetal power of the State, hidden under the neutral ‘unum,’ accommodate the centrifugal forces that might generate a societal and cultural ‘plura’ out of the hallowed political and territorial ‘pluribus’? Do diversities imply, for their survival and development, a ‘middle ground,’ a ‘mainstream,’ a ‘tradition’-some kind of American norm?

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Susan Savage Lee in: Journal of American Studies in Turkey, 33-34 (2011), 104ff

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Gregory Jason Bell in: Moravian Journal of Literature and Film, vol. 3, no. 2 (2012), 89ff

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Agnieszka Kotwasińska in: Polish Journal for American Studies, Vol. 6 (2012), 139ff