In recent years, Peter N. Stearns has established himself as the
foremost historian of American emotional life. In books on anger,
jealousy, "coolness," and body image, he has mapped out the basic
terrain of the American psyche.
Now Stearns crowns his work of the past decade with this
powerful volume, in which he reveals the fundamental dichotomy at
the heart of the national character: a self-indulgent hedonism and
the famed American informality on the one hand, and a deeply
imbedded repressiveness on the other.
Whether hunting and gathering tribe or complex industrial
civilization, every social group is governed by explicit and
implicit guidelines on how to behave. But these definitions vary
widely. The Japanese worry less about public drunkenness than
Americans. Northern Europeans adhere to stricter standards than
Americans when it comes to littering. Today, we swear more now and
spit less, discuss sex more and death less.
With an emphasis on sex, culture, and discipline of the body,
Stearns traces how particular anxieties take root, and how they
express inherent tension in contemporary standards and a stubborn
nostalgia for the previous nineteenth century regime.
Battleground of Desire explodes common wisdom about Americans in
the twentieth century as normless and tolerant, emphasizing that
most of us follow a litany of rules, governing everything from
adultery to bad breath.
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