Table of Contents
Articles
| American Exceptionalism: An idea That Will Not Die | |
| Dale Carter | 76-84 |
| A City Upon a Hill: American Literature and the Ideology of Exceptionalism | |
| Thomas B. Byers | 85-105 |
| Writing, Criticism and the Imagination of Nation: American Exceptionalism and the Evolution of American Studies | |
| James Mendelsohn | 106-126 |
| Technology and Cultural Difference | |
| David E. Nye | 127-144 |
| Newt's Clean Slate or American Exceptionalism in the Information Age | |
| Eric Gothey | 145-170 |
| American Exceptionalism and Judicial Activism | |
| Helle Porsdam | 171-194 |
| Passion Plus Archives; An Interview with Warren F. Kimball | |
| Niels Bjerre-Poulsen | 195-205 |
Book Reviews
| We Are All Multiculturalists Now et al. | |
| Nathan Glazer et al. | 206-220 |
Book Review
| Nathan Glazer's 'We Are All Multiculturalists Now' | |
| Bruce Leslie | 206-210 |
| I. Bernard Cohen's 'Science and the Founding Fathers: Science in the Political Thought of Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin, John Adams & James Madison' | |
| David Nye | 210-211 |
| Richard H. King and Helen Taylor (eds.): Dixie Debates: Perspectives on Southern Cultures | |
| Esa Penttilä | 211-214 |
| John Gerard Ruggie's 'Winning the Peace. America and World Order in the New Era | |
| Erik Beulcel | 214-215 |
| Godfrey Hodgson's 'The World Turned Right Side Up; A History of the Conservative Ascendancy in America' | |
| Peter Rasmussen | 216-218 |
| Sacvan Bercovitch (ed): The Cambridge History of American Literature, vol. II: Prose Writing 1820-1865 | |
| American Studies in the US ASIS | 218-220 |
ISSN: 00448060