02371oam 2200373z- 450 991023079970332120200505172036.088-6728-619-6(CKB)3810000000208600(BIP)054939659(EXLCZ)99381000000020860020180916c2015uuuu -u- -engThe American exceptionalism revisited /edited by Marcello Fantoni and Leonardo MorlinoRoma Viella20151 online resource (276 p.) 88-6728-328-6 88-6728-620-X When looking at the US from a European perspective a sort of paradox immediately emerges. On the one hand, the 'American way of life' has been penetrating in depth our everyday life and, even more, our Western culture through the music, the movies, the literature and all possible consumerist habits. But, on the other hand, all recurrent statements have been emphasizing the 'American exceptionalism' of political institutions, that is, how different and distant the North American institutions are from the European ones with regards to the government leadership, the relationships between existing powers, the connections with the citizens and even the very notion of democracy. This book will not analyze the reasons of such exceptionalism. It addresses a more salient and up to date question: how much exceptionalism is today still present if we compare US democratic institutions to the European ones? In other words, has there been a convergence or are the differences still very strong and accentuated? And if there has been convergence, in what directions? Or if resilient divergences, on what aspects? Moreover, how to explain the convergence, if there has been one?ExceptionalismUnited StatesCongressesExceptionalismEuropeCongressesUnited StatesPolitics and government21st centuryCongressesEuropePolitics and government21st centuryCongressesUnited statesEuropePolitical scienceExceptionalismExceptionalismMorlino Leonardo1947-120159Fantoni MarcelloBOOK9910230799703321The American exceptionalism revisited4171989UNINA