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Informationen zum Autor Born in Korea just right before the Korean War. Majored physics and served Navy as an officer. Immigrated to America for about 40 years ago. Likes playing piano and many musical instruments. Einstein is his most favorite person and like Beethoven for his music. Likes to play moonlight piano sonata. He spends most of his time with his wife and cannot live without her help because she manages his life. Now running a screen printing, engraving and promotional product business in Washington. Likes to talk about Jesus and the life. The daily life now is exercising and playing piano, violin, cycling, taking care of the front and backyard with his wife together always. Klappentext In recent years, particularly since devolution in the UK, there have been many attempts to identify what exactly Englishness really involves. In this major contribution to debates about English identity, leading cultural theorist Robert J. C. Young argues that the recent uncertainty about the nature of the English arises from more than just the challenges of devolution, or even the end of empire. It is rather the long-term result of the fact that in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Englishness was never really about England, the place, its essence, or its national character, at all. It was rather developed as a form of ethnic identity for those who were precisely not English, but rather made up the English diaspora around the world, Americans, Canadians, Australians, New Zealanders, South Africans. Englishness was constructed as a translatable quality or identity that could be taken on or appropriated by anyone anywhere - which is why the most English Englishmen have rarely been English. This construction was so powerful that even today the English diaspora continues to act together at a political level around the globe. In England itself, this meant that being English was characterized through an open structure of inclusion rather than exclusion, which helps to explain why the country has been able to transform itself into one of the most successful of modern multicultural nations. Zusammenfassung In this major contribution to debates about English identity! leading theorist Robert J.C. Young argues that Englishness was never really about England at all. In the nineteenth century! it was rather developed as a form of long-distance identity for the English diaspora around the world. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface. Introduction: Exodus. 1. Saxonism. 2. 'New Theory of Race: Saxon v. Celt'. 3. Moral and Philosophical Anatomy. 4. The Times vs. the Celts. 5. Matthew Arnold's Critique of 'Englishism'. 6. 'A Vaster England': The Anglo-Saxon. 7. 'England Round the World'. 8. Englishness: England and Nowhere. Notes. Index ...