| #2624807 in Books | 2014-08-26 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 9.00 x6.25 x1.25l,.0 | File type: PDF | 320 pages|||Ritivoi lends her lucid, careful, well balanced analysis to a topic to which our years of heightened suspicion concede heightened relevance. She offers a wealth of material on the American, German, Russian and Palestinian historical and cultural contexts in a
Hannah Arendt, Herbert Marcuse, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and Edward Said each steered major intellectual and political schools of thought in American political discourse after World War II, yet none of them was American, which proved crucial to their ways of arguing and reasoning both in and out of the American context. In an effort to convince their audiences they were American enough, these thinkers deployed deft rhetorical strategies that made their cosmopolitanism fee...
You can specify the type of files you want, for your device.Intimate Strangers: Arendt, Marcuse, Solzhenitsyn, and Said in American Political Discourse | Andreea Ritivoi. A good, fresh read, highly recommended.