Scholars pinpoint source of American exceptionalism: the nuclear family

Locutus

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Jun 18, 2007
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The Fourth of July is always an occasion to think about what the United States of America has been, is and will be. A good way to reflect on that is to pick up a copy of "America 3.0" by James Bennett and Michael Lotus and ponder its lessons.

As the title suggests, Bennett and Lotus see the nation as having evolved from an agricultural America 1.0 to an industrial America 2.0 and struggling now to evolve again into an information age America 3.0. That's a familiar framework.

Where they differ from other analyses is that they see the roots of American exceptionalism, our penchant for liberty and individualism, stretching far back -- more than 1,000 years -- beyond 1776. Back to the Anglo-Saxon invaders of England after the fall of the Roman Empire.
Drawing on the 19th century historians Edward Augustus Freeman and Frederic Maitland and contemporary scholars Emmanuel Todd, Alan Macfarlane and James Campbell, they argue that the Anglo-Saxons brought with them a unique institution, the absolute nuclear family, "the continuous core of our distinct American culture."

In nuclear families, individuals, not parents, select spouses; women have comparative freedom and equality; children have no rights of inheritance; grown children leave parents' homes and are not bound to extended families.

On each point this is contrary to longstanding family patterns in the rest of the world.


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With Its Roots in the Nuclear Family, the Nation Evolves Into America 3.0 | RealClearPolitics
 

Cliffy

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Nov 19, 2008
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The nuclear family is contrary to long standing family patterns because it is unnatural and the source of most western neuroses and angst, which is why America is exceptionally psychotic and suffers from split personality disorder (extreme partisan politics).