Introduction: The Fast Way to Peace 1. The Service Ethic How Bourgeois Men Made Peace with Babbittry 2. A Decent Standard of Living How Europeans Were Measured by the American Way of Life 3. The Chain Store How Modern Distribution Dispossessed Commerce 4. Big-Brand Goods How Marketing Outmaneuvered the Marketplace 5. Corporate Advertising How the Science of Publicity Subverted the Arts of Commerce 6. The Star System How Hollywood Turned Cinema Culture into Entertainment Value 7. The Consumer-Citizen How Europeans Traded Rights for Goods 8. Supermarketing How Big-Time Merchandisers Leapfrogged over Local Grocers 9. A Model Mrs. Consumer How Mass Commodities Settled into Hearth and Home Conclusion: How the Slow Movement Put Perspective on the Fast Life Notes Bibliographic Essay Acknowledgments Index
Quite possibly the most ambitious, original, and comprehensive study of the complex two-sided interactions between American popular culture and Europe to date. Both fair-minded and lively, de Grazia develops a bold overview of her subject right up to the present, without ever losing sight of the national and individual variations in the larger patterns of production, marketing, and reception. A dazzling and eloquent book. -- Ann Douglas, author of Terrible Honesty: Mongrel Manhattan in the 1920s Irresistible Empire is extraordinary in the breadth of its historical vision, the depth of its archival research, and the fluency with which its author tacks across the 'White Atlantic' and, in turn, across continental Europe itself. Few authors approach de Grazia's wide familiarity with the sources and issues, and fewer still can write with such a marvelous balance of generosity and irony. A spectacular feast for the senses and the mind. -- Michael Geyer, University of Chicago Irresistible Empire is a brilliant synthesis of economic and cultural history--magisterial in scope, convincing in argument, written with vigor and grace. Victoria de Grazia breathes new life into the notion of 'Americanization,' providing fascinating details and fresh insights on nearly every page. This is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the elusive but implacable influence of American consumer culture in foreign settings, throughout the twentieth century and beyond. A powerful, important, and timely book. -- Jackson Lears, author of Fables of Abundance: a Cultural History of Advertising in America Thomas Mann, a Rotarian? This is only one of the many delicious surprises awaiting the reader of Irresistible Empire, Victoria de Grazia's rich and richly ironic exploration of the vexed encounter between American salesmanship and the mercantile cultures of continental Europe. Tacking effortlessly across the White Atlantic, de Grazia tells the story of a near-century-long, transnational seduction--a story that is one part coercive geopolitics and one part coyly improvised dance. -- Jean-Christophe Agnew, Yale University
Victoria de Grazia is Professor of History and James R. Barker Professor of Contemporary Civilization, Columbia University.
Quite possibly the most ambitious, original, and comprehensive
study of the complex two-sided interactions between American
popular culture and Europe to date. Both fair-minded and lively, de
Grazia develops a bold overview of her subject right up to the
present, without ever losing sight of the national and individual
variations in the larger patterns of production, marketing, and
reception. A dazzling and eloquent book.
*Ann Douglas, author of Terrible Honesty: Mongrel Manhattan in
the 1920s*
Irresistible Empire is extraordinary in the breadth of its
historical vision, the depth of its archival research, and the
fluency with which its author tacks across the 'White Atlantic'
and, in turn, across continental Europe itself. Few authors
approach de Grazia's wide familiarity with the sources and issues,
and fewer still can write with such a marvelous balance of
generosity and irony. A spectacular feast for the senses and the
mind.
*Michael Geyer, University of Chicago*
Irresistible Empire is a brilliant synthesis of economic and
cultural history--magisterial in scope, convincing in argument,
written with vigor and grace. Victoria de Grazia breathes new life
into the notion of 'Americanization,' providing fascinating details
and fresh insights on nearly every page. This is essential reading
for anyone who wants to understand the elusive but implacable
influence of American consumer culture in foreign settings,
throughout the twentieth century and beyond. A powerful, important,
and timely book.
*Jackson Lears, author of Fables of Abundance: a Cultural
History of Advertising in America*
A smart and engaging look at how U.S. consumerism swept aside
European cultural conservatism to create a transatlantic,
transnational market.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Thomas Mann, a Rotarian? This is only one of the many delicious
surprises awaiting the reader of Irresistible Empire, Victoria de
Grazia's rich and richly ironic exploration of the vexed encounter
between American salesmanship and the mercantile cultures of
continental Europe. Tacking effortlessly across the White Atlantic,
de Grazia tells the story of a near-century-long, transnational
seduction--a story that is one part coercive geopolitics and one
part coyly improvised dance.
*Jean-Christophe Agnew, Yale University*
If Charlemagne or Napoleon could see their continent today, they
would be with de Grazia. One glance at Europe's great capitals, and
they would assume Europe had been conquered, occupied and settled
by Americans. The men who dreamed of l'Europe profonde would curse
the ubiquity of Eminem as they sat in the greasy KFC on the Falls
Road in Belfast munching their Chicken Popcorn. They would stagger
their way around Italy's most beautiful city, guided by a
McDonald's map of McVenice. Irresistible Empire is the story of how
this happened, of how an imperium came to Europe in the form of an
emporium. Unlike the Middle East and Latin America, Europe has seen
only the peaceful face of America's empire. De Grazia...shows
how--in just one century--the Old Continent was subject to slow
conquest by a million consumer goods.
*New York Times Book Review*
[An] important, richly detailed, sometimes eccentric book...[De
Grazia's] subject is 'the rise of a great imperium with the outlook
of a great emporium': how America's products, producers and
salesmen, with the full cognizance and backing of its politicians,
came after 1900 to transform not just the purchasing habits and
desires of Europeans but also their ideas about society and
themselves...Much has been published on American empire and on the
transatlantic divide in recent years. The great virtue of this work
is that it takes a provocative and unusual line. De Grazia
illustrates how empires can seduce and not simply coerce.
*The Nation*
A major work of scholarship, 20 years in the making, that uses the
tools of economics, history, and cultural studies to lay bare the
mechanisms that created the American Century.
*New York Sun*
Irresistible Empire describes how 'cleverly marketed and advertised
brand-goods' from across the Atlantic knocked down the fortresses
of a more hierarchical and craft-based 20th-century European
culture. The book is full of elegant case studies and erudite
anecdotes.
*Irish Times*
This book gives a doorstopping gloss on Churchill's remark that
Americans always do the right thing...but only after exhausting all
the other possibilities. [Europe's] capitulation to their
capitalism is the subject of this elegant work. It is an eloquent
book too, written with measure and cadences and care which have
their roots in Old World learning rather than New World Write-Lite
and its flashy neologisms...This is an impressively learned and
intelligent book.
*The Independent*
Victoria de Grazia's Irresistible Empire, a 480-page juggernaut in
a mini-flotilla of recent books about 'soft power,' represents a
remarkable, big-think undertaking two decades in the
making...Today, as Europe endures turbulence over the state of its
own union, de Grazia's book could not be more timely...That de
Grazia limits herself to the roots of American influence in Europe
is a testament to her depth. But it is her robust writing, mastery
of scene-setting, and deft deconstruction of illustrative events
that move it from academic to accessible.
*Christian Science Monitor*
This wonderful book, written with extraordinary erudition and verve
by a social historian, is a study of the way in which the American
ethos of mass consumption has 'conquered' Europe since the interwar
period.
*Foreign Affairs*
The triumph of American commercial values over old Europe's overtly
intellectual culture in the 20th century is the theme of Victoria
de Grazia's compelling, thorough and sparklingly written
study...The author is right to contend that mass consumer culture
is such an ephemeral form of material life that the great trends
that formed it are 'easily lost to sight.' But this masterful book
brings them right back into our field of vision.
*Financial Times*
De Grazia writes clearly, giving an uncommon perspective on the
ways and means by which the U.S. and Europe drew close after
WWII.
*Publishers Weekly*
[R]eaders will be intrigued by de Grazia's magisterial account of
economic and cultural change.
*SalemPressOnline*
This is an extraordinary book, and de Grazia displays impressive
range and erudition in taking the reader from Dresden to Duluth,
Minnesota, from Belgian entrepreneurs to Italian supermarket
concerns, to the boardrooms of the advertising giant J. Walter
Thompson on New York's Madison Avenue. She attends both to
material, economic changes and to the social (and
gender-historical) consequences and cultural meanings of those
changes, a divide that few historians are able to span.
Consequently, hers is a richly textured and multilayered account,
highly accessible for its absorbing anecdotes and engaging style
and yet deeply grounded in archival research and current
historiographic insight. Above all, de Grazia has done a tremendous
service by theorizing and historicizing this contentious topic and
by giving it the transnational treatment that it demands. This
ambitious book will remain a reference point for years to come.
*Times Literary Supplement*
In this stimulating book, Victoria de Grazia explains how an
American "market empire" displaced an Old World consumer regime
built around community, solidarity, and class hierarchy...De Grazia
develops her argument through case studies, each one masterfully
written and impressively documented...Her multilingual research,
attention to the power of norms in everyday life, and ability to
synthesize business, politics, and culture make this one of the
most important books written about consumerism in international
history.
*Journal of American History*
Victoria de Grazia's book makes a significant contribution to the
current academic discourse on imperialism by focusing not on its
political and military dimensions, but on its cultural
manifestations...This is a scholarly and provocative book which
makes a significant contribution to the understanding of the
contemporary role of culture and its diffusion...In addition to its
scholarly contributions, this is a readable and enjoyable book,
which contains a wealth of interesting information that will appeal
to both academic and popular audiences.
*Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare*
Victoria de Grazia's Irresistible Empire: America's Advance Through
Twentieth-Century Europe is both a study of the forces working to
'Americanize' Europe and a contribution to the debate about their
value...The strength of her account lies in its long-term
perspective...De Grazia approaches the issue of Americanization
through a series of finely drawn case studies which examine not
merely the obvious examples of American commercial practice--the
chain store, big-brand goods, Hollywood movies, and the
supermarket--but also the mechanisms by which she believes American
capitalist values were spread through Europe. Many of these
individual chapters read like stand-alone essays--nuanced, witty,
and carefully polished accounts, for instance, of the Rotary
International or the European poster industry...As Irresistible
Empire amply demonstrates, shrewd American entrepreneurs and
patriotic zealots (often one and the same person) have tried hard
and often successfully to inculcate 'American' business practices
in Europe. Europe would be a different place without them.
*New York Review of Books*
Given the proliferation of studies of consumption, a comparative
and integrative study in this area is to be warmly welcomed.
Victoria de Grazia makes a notable contribution with a study that
offers a good deal of interest to business historians...Both the
range and the close argument encourage frequent dips into the
extensive notes and bibliography to identify particular sources and
connections.
*Business History Review*
Victoria de Grazia's Irresistible Empire is a dazzling work that
aims to reassess the American impact on Europe in the twentieth
century...No historian has yet attempted what de Grazia does here:
a sweeping synthesis that provides very detailed and thick
descriptions of just how private and state projects have operated
to carry American methods and products to Europe, changing the
nature of business and consumer culture.
*H-German*
[Victoria de Grazia’s] insightful, thoroughly researched, and
beautifully written book treats an important and pivotal moment in
Europe’s encounter with the emerging hyper-puissance, the United
States… On the whole, Victoria de Grazia’s recent work will be
valuable to intellectual, cultural, and business historians, as
well as anyone who enjoys ruminating on the divisions that continue
to bedevil the transatlantic alliance, especially in regard to how
Europeans and Americans conduct their business and, indeed, their
lives.
*Theory & Society*
This richly rewarding and smoothly synthetic work traces the
influence of American business practices and models in Europe
through the crisis-wracked course of the twentieth century. Its
palpable merits lie in the close coordination of archival research
and transversal analysis across different regional locales,
business sectors, nation-states, and periods--all accomplished with
brisk synoptic sweep...This important, well-crafted, and
stimulating work has very convenient aids in its illustrations,
endnotes, and critical bibliographical essays. It will be an
excellent classroom resource across undergraduate and graduate
courses. The argument is bolstered by clear, pertinent statistical
information and "hard" data to support the author's case for sinewy
"soft-power" hegemony.
*Journal of Modern History*
Victoria de Grazia’s Irresistible Empire is a bravura performance.
Based on prodigious research in archival and published sources on
both sides of the Atlantic, the book is beautifully written, with
epic sweep and the eye of a novelist—or perhaps better a
filmmaker—for the significant detail that simultaneously limns a
character and advances the story line. Fascinating empirical
discoveries await the reader in every chapter, from Thomas Mann as
a Rotarian at the beginning to the Eurocommunist origins of the
Slow Food movement at the end. But Irresistible Empire is no mere
cabinet of archival curiosities or album of microhistorical
vignettes. Animated by a bold thesis about the triumph of American
mass consumer culture, with its stratified, status-conscious worlds
of goods, over European bourgeois civilization, this book offers
nothing less than a grand macro-synthesis of twentieth-century
Western history, integrating cultural, economic, and diplomatic
themes on a transatlantic scale.
*Journal of Cold War Studies*
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