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NEW ENGLAND (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   131483


Beyond the crusades, beyond prejudice / Varisco, Daniel   Journal Article
Varisco, Daniel Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract As the Moroccan American scholar Anouar Majid reminds us on the first page of his latest book, Islam and America: Building a Future without Prejudice, we are drowning in information about the relationships of Muslims and the West but are not yet being rescued by this expanding corpus. This and his earlier We are All Moors come as close to any books I have read recently that hold out promise for such a rescue, at least in the forward-thinking rhetoric that outlasts the general effluvium of political punditry. Majid, who came to the United States in 1983, is currently director of the Center for Global Humanities at the University of New England in Portland, Maine. His training in literature has well prepared him to probe novels, poems, travel accounts and political manifestos for past reflections on how Islam has been perceived since the founding of the United States. His grasp of American history and a wide range of historical sources consulted is a welcome contribution to a field where partisan political books stock major bookstores and reflective academic studies are read almost exclusively by a small circle of fellow academics. Both of these books deserve a wider readership that I fear they will not receive in the flood of punditry on Islam vs. the West
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2
ID:   113046


Place matters: domestic regionalism and the formation of American foreign policy / Fry, Joseph A   Journal Article
Fry, Joseph A Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Place matters in how Americans and their political representative have responded to U.S foreign relations. Domestic regionalism has exercised a persistent and at times primary influence on the formulation of U.S. foreign policy. Through a selective historiographical review of the literature addressing New England, the Midwest, and the South, this article urges scholars to recognize this important domestic influence on policy formation-an influence that affords the opportunity to assess ideological, racial, religious, economic, and political considerations in a useful collective fashion.
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