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Americanization

Americanization or Americanisation (see spelling differences) is the influence of American culture and business on other countries outside the United States, including their media, cuisine, business practices, popular culture, technology or political techniques. Some observers have described Americanization as synonymous with progress and innovation.[4][5][6]

United States-based fast food franchises, such as this McDonald's location in China, are widely seen as a symbol of Americanization in many countries.[1][2][3]

The cinema of the United States has dominated most of the world's media markets since the 1910s, and is the chief medium by which the international community sees American fashions, customs, scenery, and way of life.[7][8] The top 50 highest-grossing films of all time were all made either entirely or partially in the United States or were financed by US production companies, even with limited or no artistic involvement.[9] The top 50 constituents set and filmed entirely in the United Kingdom, like some of the Harry Potter franchise, or with deliberately and quintessentially British source material, like the Lord of the Rings series, count as American productions for solely financial reasons. This coopting of the works of other nations and cultures into "American" works (and the hegemonic ability to do as such) forms part of many critical definitions of Americanization.[10]

United States-based commercial enterprises operating internationally are also associated with Americanization. Notably, the Coca-Cola Company was previously the top global company by revenue,[11] giving rise to the term "Coca-Cola diplomacy" for anything emblematic of U.S. soft power. US-based fast food franchises such as McDonald's, Subway, Starbucks, Burger King, Pizza Hut, KFC and Domino's Pizza, among others, have numerous outlets around the world. Of the top ten global brands (2017) by revenue, seven are based in the United States:[12] Apple Inc., Google, Microsoft, Coca-Cola, Amazon, Facebook, and IBM.

During the Cold War, Americanization was the primary soft power method chosen to counter the polar process of Sovietization around the world. Education, schools, and particularly universities became the main target for Americanization. Resistance to Americanization within the university community restrained its effectiveness,[13] though it was still much more successful than Sovietization.[14]: 6  Americanization has become more prevalent since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, which left America as the world's sole superpower (the full soft power of China as a potential competing influence has yet to manifest within Occidental pop culture). Americanization found yet another gear with the advent of widespread high-speed Internet use in the mid-2000s (notably heavily censored in China).

Criticism of Americanization has included opposition to U.S. investments in Europe during the 1960s,[15] which subsided by the 1970s.[16] A new dimension of anti-Americanism is fear of the pervasiveness of American Internet technology.[17]

Definitions edit

Like many concepts in social sciences, the term has been called ambiguous, however, a rough consensus on its meaning exists. Harm G. Schröter who focused on the economic dimension of the process, defined it as "an adapted transfer of values, behaviours, institutions, technologies, patterns of organization, symbols and norms from the [United States] to the economic life of other states".[14]: 3–4  Mel van Elteren defined this in a negative way, as "a process in which economic, technological, political, social, cultural and/or socio–psychological influences emanating from America or Americans impinge on values, norms, belief systems, mentalities, habits, rules, technologies, practices, institutions and behaviors of non-Americans".[18]: 103 

Media and popular culture edit

Hollywood, the American film and television industry, has since the 1910s dominated most of the world's media markets. It is the chief medium by which people across the globe see American fashions, customs, scenery, and way of life.[8] The major film studios of the United States are the primary source of the most commercially successful and most ticket selling movies in the world.[19][20] The top 50 highest-grossing films of all time were all made entirely or partially in the United States.[7][8]

In general, the U.S. government plays only a facilitating role in the dissemination of films, television, books, journals etc. However, after the occupation of the former Axis countries during World War II, the U.S. government played a major role in restructuring the media in those countries to eliminate totalitarianism and to promote democracy against fascism and Nazism. For example, in Germany, the American occupation headquarters, Office of Military Government (OMGUS), began its own newspaper based in Munich in 1945. Die Neue Zeitung was edited by German and Jewish émigrés who had fled to the United States before the war. Its mission was to destroy Nazi cultural remnants and encourage democracy by exposing Germans to the ways American culture operated. There was great detail on sports, politics, business, Hollywood, fashions, and international affairs.[21]

Despite the restrictions placed by communist authorities, Americanization would continue to spread out over the Iron Curtain even before the collapse of the Soviet Union and accelerated afterwards. The first McDonald's in Soviet Russia had a grand opening on Moscow's Pushkin Square on 31 January 1990 with approximately 38,000 customers waiting in hours long lines, breaking company records at the time.[22] By 1997, there were 21 locations of the Russian chain.[23]

The importation of Little Golden Books (Petits Livres d'Or) to France under the publisher Cocorico after World War II is discussed as a subtle way of implementing cultural productions that "presented the economic principles of American liberalism in a favorable light" in a study by Cécile Boulaire.[24]

Foreign versions of American television programs are rebroadcast around the world, many of them through American broadcasters and their subsidiaries (such as HBO Asia, CNBC Europe and CNN International). Many of the distributors broadcast American programming on their television channels. In 2006, a survey of 20 countries by Radio Times found seven American shows in the ten most watched: CSI: Miami, Lost, Desperate Housewives, The Simpsons, CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, Without a Trace, and The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius.[25]

 
The iconic Hollywood Sign in Los Angeles, California

American films have been historically extremely popular around the world and often dominate cinemas as a result of a high demand of U.S. product exported to consumers to clear away the outlook of World War II.[26] The top 50 highest-grossing films of all time were all made entirely or partially in the United States. Often, part of the negotiating in free trade agreements between the U.S. and other nations involves screen quotas. One such case is Mexico, which abolished screen quotas after the establishment of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with the U.S. and Canada.[27]

Many American musicians, such as Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson, are popular worldwide and have sold over 500 million albums each.[28] Michael Jackson's album Thriller, at 100 million sales, is the best-selling album of all time internationally.[29]

By the study of vocabulary and spelling of English words in books and tweets, American English is more common in communities of the European Union than British English. This trend is more apparent in the events after World War II and the end of the Soviet Union.[30]

Business and brands edit

 
A kosher McDonald's in Ashkelon, Israel

Many of the world's largest companies, such as Alphabet (Google), Amazon, AT&T, Apple, Coca-Cola, Disney, General Motors, McDonald's, Nike, Meta, Microsoft, Pepsi, and Walmart, were founded and are headquartered in the United States.[12] Of the world's 500 largest companies, 124 are headquartered in the U.S.[12] Coca-Cola, which previously held the top spot, is often viewed as a symbol of Americanization,[11] giving rise to the term "Coca-Cola diplomacy" for anything emblematic of U.S. soft power. The American fast food industry, the world's first and largest, is also often viewed as being a symbol of U.S. marketing dominance. Companies such as McDonald's,[31] Burger King, Pizza Hut, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and Domino's Pizza, among others, have numerous outlets around the world.

 
Starbucks Coffee in Xi'an, China
 
Burger King in Ankara, Turkey

Many of the world's biggest computer companies are also U.S.-based, such as Microsoft, Apple, Intel, HP Inc., Dell, and IBM, and much of the software bought worldwide is created by U.S.-based companies. Carayannis and Campbell note, "The [United States] occupies, also in global terms, a very strong position in the software sector."[32]

Even as far back as 1900, some observers saw "Americanization" as synonymous with progress and innovation.[4] In Germany during the 1920s, the American efficiency movement was called "rationalization" and was a powerful social and economic force. In part, it looked explicitly at American models, especially Fordism.[33] "Rationalization" meant higher productivity and greater efficiency and promised that science would bring prosperity. More generally, it promised a new level of modernity and was applied to economic production and consumption as well as public administration. Various versions of rationalization were promoted by industrialists and social democrats, by engineers and architects, by educators and academics, by middle-class feminists and social workers, by government officials and politicians of many parties. As ideology and practice, rationalization challenged and transformed not only machines, factories, and vast business enterprises but also the lives of middle-class and working-class Germans.[34]

Department stores threatened the more local businesses, with low prices and chain-managed stores. The small businesses were determined and fought back to protect their source of income from the U.S. market.[35]

During the Cold War, Americanization was the method to counter the processes of Sovietization around the world. Education, schools, and particularly universities became the main target for Americanization. However, resistance to Americanization of the university community restrained it,[13] although it was still much more successful than Sovietization.[14]: 6 

Visibility edit

 
Koç University, one of the top universities in Turkey, is based on the American model. The university also has an American football team, the Koç Rams.

From 1950 to 1965, American investments in Europe soared by 800% to $13.9 billion, and in the European Economic Community they rose ten times to $6.25 billion. Europe's share of American investments increased from 15% to 28%. The investments were of very high visibility and generated much talk of Americanization. Even so, American investments in Europe represented only 50% of the total European investment and American-owned companies in the European Economic Community employ only 2 or 3% of the total labor force. The basic reason for U.S. investments is no longer lower production costs, faster economic growth, or higher profits in Europe but the desire to maintain a competitive position based largely on American technological superiority. Opposition to U.S. investments was originally confined to France but later spread to other European countries. Public opinion began to resent American advertising and business methods, personnel policies, and the use of the English language by American companies. Criticism was also directed toward the international currency system which was blamed for inflationary tendencies as a result of the dominant position of the U.S. dollar.[15] However, by the 1970s, European investments in the U.S. had increased even more rapidly than vice versa, and Geir Lundestad finds there was less talk of the Americans buying Europe.[16]

Recent trends edit

Americanization has become more prevalent since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Until the late 1980s, the communist press could be counted on to be especially critical of the United States. To some extent, Russia continued that role under Vladimir Putin, and there are similar tendencies in China. Putin in 2013 published an opinion piece in The New York Times that attacked the American tendency to see itself as an exceptional indispensable nation. "It is extremely dangerous," Putin warned, "to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional, whatever the motivation."[36]

A new dimension of anti-Americanism is fear of the pervasiveness of American Internet technology. Americanization has arrived through widespread high-speed Internet and smartphone technology since 2008, with a large fraction of the new apps and hardware being designed in Silicon Valley.[17] In Europe, there is growing concern about excess Americanization through Google, Facebook, Twitter, the iPhone, and Uber, among many other American Internet-based corporations. European governments have increasingly expressed concern about privacy issues, as well as antitrust and taxation issues regarding the new American giants. There is a fear that they are significantly evading taxes and posting information that may violate European privacy laws.[37] The Wall Street Journal in 2015 reported "deep concerns in Europe's highest policy circles about the power of U.S. technology companies."[38]

Historiography edit

The Americanization of the Navajo at Canyon de Chelly was carried out by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the late 1800s.[39]

In 1902 the British journalist William Stead used this term in the title of his book, The Americanization of the World, in which he discussed the growing popularity of the "American ideas".[5]

Berghahn (2010) analyzes the debate on the usefulness of the concepts of 'Americanization' and 'Westernization'. He reviews the recent research on the European–American relationship during the Cold War that has dealt with the cultural influence of the United States upon Europe. He then discusses the relevant work on this subject in the fields of economic and business history. Overall, the article tries to show that those who have applied the concept of 'Americanization' to their research on cultural or economic history have been well aware of the complexities of trans-Atlantic relations in this period, whether they were viewed as a two-way exchange or as a process of circulation.[5]

Francis Fukuyama argue that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 prompted a unipolar global capitalist reality that meant the "end of history".[40] Some see this as a flawed view, mired in US exceptionalism. John Fousek said "the triumphalism embedded in Francis Fukuyama's view that the end of the Cold War marked the end of history, constitutes a new, historically contingent variation on the ideology that framed conflict in the beginning".[41] He argues that the traditional exceptional image of US complete hegemonic power can be "quite dangerous" because it prompted American intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan, which just like in Vietnam, proved to show the limitations of American power across the globe.[41] However, in the eyes of Mary Nolan, Americanisation is not an all consuming force and what emerged during 1990 was "a multipolar global order".[42] Therefore, the actual impact the US and Americanisation has on the globe is hotly debated and runs deep into modern political policymaking.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Azaryahu, Maoz (October 22, 2017). "The Golden Arches of McDonald's: On the "Americanization" of Israel". Israel Studies. 5 (1): 41–64. JSTOR 30245529.
  2. ^ Fraser, Nick (November 2, 2014). "How the World Was Won: The Americanization of Everywhere review – a brilliant essay". The Observer. Retrieved October 22, 2017 – via www.theguardian.com.
  3. ^ Beck, Ulrich; Sznaider, Natan; Winter, Rainer (October 22, 2017). Global America?: The Cultural Consequences of Globalization. Liverpool University Press. ISBN 9780853239185. Retrieved October 22, 2017 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b Stead, W. T. (1901). The Americanization of the World. Horace Markley. p. 393.
  5. ^ a b c Berghahn, Volker R. (February 1, 2010). "The debate on 'Americanization' among economic and cultural historians". Cold War History. 10 (1): 107–130. doi:10.1080/14682740903388566. ISSN 1468-2745. S2CID 144459911.
  6. ^ Fergie, Dexter (March 24, 2022). "How American Culture Ate the World". The New Republic. ISSN 0028-6583. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  7. ^ a b William Hoynes; David Croteau; Stefania Milan (2011). Media/Society: Industries, Images, and Audiences. SAGE. p. 333. ISBN 9781412974202.
  8. ^ a b c Michael Pokorny and John Sedgwick (2004). Economic History of Film. Routledge. p. 25. ISBN 9781134344307.
  9. ^ Criteria for determining a movie's country of origin are mutable and subjective but are, in practice, based on fiscal contribution and head office locations, which creates a significant advantage for a country with the money and industrial support structure - i.e. Hollywood - to fund large-scale motion pictures)
  10. ^ "British Films on the Brink of Americanization". May 28, 2015.
  11. ^ a b . NYSE Euronext. Archived from the original on December 15, 2011. Retrieved August 24, 2007.
  12. ^ a b c "Global 500". Fortune. Retrieved August 25, 2022.
  13. ^ a b Natalia Tsvetkova. Failure of American and Soviet Cultural Imperialism in German Universities, 1945–1990. Boston, Leiden: Brill, 2013
  14. ^ a b c Schröter, Harm G. (December 5, 2005). Americanization of the European Economy: A compact survey of American economic influence in Europe since the 1800s. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-1-4020-2934-9.
  15. ^ a b Niels Grosse, "American Investments In Europe," Europa-Archiv, 1967, Vol. 22 Issue 1, pp. 23–32
  16. ^ a b Geir Lundestad (2005). The United States and Western Europe since 1945: from "Empire" by invitation to transatlantic drift. Oxford University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-0-19-928397-2.
  17. ^ a b Kroes, Rob (2003). "The Internet An Instrument of Americanization?". In Beck, Ulrich; Sznaider, Natan; Winter, Rainer (eds.). Global America?: The Cultural Consequences of Globalization. Liverpool University Press. pp. 235–256. ISBN 978-0-85323-928-4.
  18. ^ Elteren, Mel van (September 14, 2006). Americanism and Americanization: A Critical History of Domestic and Global Influence. McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-2785-7.
  19. ^ Kerrigan, Finola (2010). Film Marketing. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. p. 18. ISBN 9780750686839. Retrieved February 4, 2022.
  20. ^ Davis, Glyn; Dickinson, Kay; Patti, Lisa; Villarejo, Amy (2015). Film Studies: A Global Introduction. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 299. ISBN 9781317623380. Retrieved August 24, 2020.
  21. ^ Jessica C.E. Gienow-Hecht, "Art is democracy and democracy is art: Culture, propaganda, and the Neue Zeitung in Germany", Diplomatic History (1999) 23#1 pp. 21–43
  22. ^ Maynes, Charles (February 1, 2020). "McDonald's Marks 30 Years in Russia". Voice of America. Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  23. ^ "McDonald's Cohon wary as market share slips: Charity book details struggle in Russia". The Spectator. Hamilton ON. Canadian Press. October 25, 1997. p. B4.
  24. ^ Boulaire, Cécile (2023). "The Little Golden Books in the Shadow of the CIA, or the Americanization of Children's Publishing in Cold War France." Book History 26 (fall): 390-418.
  25. ^ "CSI show 'most popular show in the world'". BBC. July 31, 2006. from the original on September 2, 2007. Retrieved October 23, 2013.
  26. ^ Hunt, Michael (2016). The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present. New York: Oxford. pp. 96–108. ISBN 978-0-19-937102-0.
  27. ^ . Adelante. Archived from the original on August 11, 2007. Retrieved August 29, 2007.
  28. ^ . Elvis.com. Archived from the original on September 26, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  29. ^ "Jackos Back". MTV. from the original on September 16, 2007. Retrieved August 30, 2007.
  30. ^ Gonçalves, Bruno; Loureiro-Porto, Lucía; Ramasco, José J.; Sánchez, David (July 3, 2017). "The Fall of the Empire: The Americanization of English". PLOS ONE. 13 (5): e0197741. arXiv:1707.00781. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0197741. PMC 5969760. PMID 29799872.
  31. ^ Karen DeBres, "A Cultural Geography of McDonald's UK," Journal of Cultural Geography, 2005
  32. ^ Elias G. Carayannis and David F. J. Campbell, Mode 3 Knowledge Production in Quadruple Helix Innovation Systems (2011) p. 42
  33. ^ Noland (1975)
  34. ^ Mary Nolan, "Housework Made Easy: the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany's Rationalized Economy," Feminist Studies. Volume: 16. Issue: 3. pp. 549+
  35. ^ Hunt, Michael H. (2014). The world Transformed: 1945 to the present. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. p. 105. ISBN 9780199371020.
  36. ^ Zachary Karabell, "The Upside of a 'De-Americanized' World: A reduced U.S. role is still a lot more powerful than 100 emerging markets, but it would force even greater internal focus for the U.S." The Atlantic 17 Oct. 2013 June 28, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ See ["Google under fire in Europe over user privacy concerns" Toronto Star 8 April 2015 December 22, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  38. ^ Tom Fairless, "Europe’s Digital Czar Slams Google, Facebook," Wall Street Journal 24 Feb. 2015 July 8, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  39. ^ Dolan, Susan; Wytsalucy, Reagan; Lyons, Keith (2022). "How a Navajo Scientist Is Helping to Restore Traditional Peach Horticulture". Features. Park Science. Vol. 36, no. 1, Summer 2022. U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved July 7, 2022.
  40. ^ Fukuyama, Francis (2012). The End of History and The Last Man (Twentieth Anniversary ed.). London: Penguin. pp. 8–9. ISBN 9780141927763.
  41. ^ a b Fousek, John (2000). To Lead the Free World: American nationalism and the cultural roots of the Cold War (1st ed.). Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 31. ISBN 0-8078-6067-0.
  42. ^ Nolan, Mary (2012). The Transatlantic Century: Europe and America, 1890-2010 (1st ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 331. ISBN 978-1-139-56980-4.

Further reading edit

  • Abdulrahim, Masoud A., Ali A. J. Al-Kandari, and Mohammed Hasanen, “The Influence of American Television Programs on University Students in Kuwait: A Synthesis,” European Journal of American Culture 28 (no. 1, 2009), 57–74.
  • Andrew Anglophone (Ed.), "Californication and Cultural Imperialism: Baywatch and the Creation of World Culture", 1997, Point Sur: Malibu University Press, .
  • Campbell, Neil, Jude Davies and George McKay, eds. Issues in Americanisation and Culture. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004.
  • DeBres, Karen. "A Cultural Geography of McDonald's UK," Journal of Cultural Geography, 2005
  • Fehrenbach, Heide, and Uta G. Poiger. "Americanization Reconsidered," in idem, eds., Transactions, Transgressions, Transformations: American Culture in Western Europe and Japan (2000)
  • Glancy, Mark. Hollywood and the Americanization of Britain, from the 1920s to the present (I.B. Tauris, 2013), 340 pages, ISBN 978-1-84885-407-9
  • Glancy, Mark. "Temporary American citizens? British audiences, Hollywood films and the threat of Americanization in the 1920s." Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television (2006) 26#4 pp. 461–84.
  • Gräser, Marcus Model America, EGO - European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2011, retrieved: March 8, 2021.
  • Haines, Gerald K. The Americanization of Brazil: A Study of U.S.Cold War Diplomacy in the Third World, 1945–54, Scholarly Resources, 1993
  • Hendershot, Robert M. Family Spats: Perception, Illusion, and Sentimentality in the Anglo-American Special Relationship (2008)
  • Hilger, Susanne: The Americanisation of the European Economy after 1880, European History Online, Mainz: Institute of European History, 2012, retrieved: June 6, 2012.
  • Kroes, Rob. "American empire and cultural imperialism: A view from the receiving end." Diplomatic History 23.3 (1999): 463-477 online.
  • Martn, Lawrence. Pledge of Allegiance: The Americanization of Canada in the Mulroney Years, Mcclelland & Stewart Ltd, 1993, ISBN 0-7710-5663-X
  • Malchow, H.L. Special Relations: The Americanization of Britain? (Stanford University Press; 2011) 400 pages; explores American influence on the culture and counterculture of metropolitan London from the 1950s to the 1970s, from "Swinging London" to black, feminist, and gay liberation. excerpt and text search
  • Moffett, Samuel E. The Americanization of Canada (1907) full text online
  • Nolan, Mary. Visions of Modernity: American Business and the Modernization of Germany (1995)
  • Nolan, Mary. "Housework Made Easy: the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany's Rationalized Economy," Feminist Studies. Volume: 16. Issue: 3. pp. 549+
  • Pells, Richard. Not like Us: How Europeans Have Loved, Hated and Transformed American Culture since World War II (1997) online
  • Reynolds, David. Rich relations: the American occupation of Britain, 1942-1945 (1995)
  • Rydell, Robert W., Rob Kroes: Buffalo Bill in Bologna. The Americanization of the World, 1869–1922, University of Chicago Press, 2005, ISBN 0-226-73242-8
  • Willett, Ralph. The Americanization of Germany, 1945–1949 (1989)
  • Zenklusen, Stefan: A Look Back at a Quarter Century of Globalization - Verifying the Thesis of Anglo-Americanization, Göttingen 2020, ISBN 978-3-7369-7273-5

Historiography edit

  • Berghahn, Volker R. "The debate on 'Americanization' among economic and cultural historians," Cold War History, Feb 2010, 10#1, pp. 107–30
  • Kuisel, Richard F. "The End of Americanization? or Reinventing a Research Field for Historians of Europe" Journal of Modern History 92#3 (Sept 2020) pp 602–634 online.

americanization, this, article, about, influence, united, states, america, culture, other, countries, process, acculturation, immigrants, native, populations, american, customs, values, immigration, other, uses, disambiguation, americanisation, spelling, diffe. This article is about the influence the United States of America has on the culture of other countries For the process of acculturation by immigrants or native populations to American customs and values see Americanization immigration For other uses see Americanization disambiguation Americanization or Americanisation see spelling differences is the influence of American culture and business on other countries outside the United States including their media cuisine business practices popular culture technology or political techniques Some observers have described Americanization as synonymous with progress and innovation 4 5 6 United States based fast food franchises such as this McDonald s location in China are widely seen as a symbol of Americanization in many countries 1 2 3 The cinema of the United States has dominated most of the world s media markets since the 1910s and is the chief medium by which the international community sees American fashions customs scenery and way of life 7 8 The top 50 highest grossing films of all time were all made either entirely or partially in the United States or were financed by US production companies even with limited or no artistic involvement 9 The top 50 constituents set and filmed entirely in the United Kingdom like some of the Harry Potter franchise or with deliberately and quintessentially British source material like the Lord of the Rings series count as American productions for solely financial reasons This coopting of the works of other nations and cultures into American works and the hegemonic ability to do as such forms part of many critical definitions of Americanization 10 United States based commercial enterprises operating internationally are also associated with Americanization Notably the Coca Cola Company was previously the top global company by revenue 11 giving rise to the term Coca Cola diplomacy for anything emblematic of U S soft power US based fast food franchises such as McDonald s Subway Starbucks Burger King Pizza Hut KFC and Domino s Pizza among others have numerous outlets around the world Of the top ten global brands 2017 by revenue seven are based in the United States 12 Apple Inc Google Microsoft Coca Cola Amazon Facebook and IBM During the Cold War Americanization was the primary soft power method chosen to counter the polar process of Sovietization around the world Education schools and particularly universities became the main target for Americanization Resistance to Americanization within the university community restrained its effectiveness 13 though it was still much more successful than Sovietization 14 6 Americanization has become more prevalent since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 which left America as the world s sole superpower the full soft power of China as a potential competing influence has yet to manifest within Occidental pop culture Americanization found yet another gear with the advent of widespread high speed Internet use in the mid 2000s notably heavily censored in China Criticism of Americanization has included opposition to U S investments in Europe during the 1960s 15 which subsided by the 1970s 16 A new dimension of anti Americanism is fear of the pervasiveness of American Internet technology 17 Contents 1 Definitions 2 Media and popular culture 3 Business and brands 4 Visibility 5 Recent trends 6 Historiography 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 9 1 HistoriographyDefinitions editLike many concepts in social sciences the term has been called ambiguous however a rough consensus on its meaning exists Harm G Schroter who focused on the economic dimension of the process defined it as an adapted transfer of values behaviours institutions technologies patterns of organization symbols and norms from the United States to the economic life of other states 14 3 4 Mel van Elteren defined this in a negative way as a process in which economic technological political social cultural and or socio psychological influences emanating from America or Americans impinge on values norms belief systems mentalities habits rules technologies practices institutions and behaviors of non Americans 18 103 Media and popular culture editHollywood the American film and television industry has since the 1910s dominated most of the world s media markets It is the chief medium by which people across the globe see American fashions customs scenery and way of life 8 The major film studios of the United States are the primary source of the most commercially successful and most ticket selling movies in the world 19 20 The top 50 highest grossing films of all time were all made entirely or partially in the United States 7 8 In general the U S government plays only a facilitating role in the dissemination of films television books journals etc However after the occupation of the former Axis countries during World War II the U S government played a major role in restructuring the media in those countries to eliminate totalitarianism and to promote democracy against fascism and Nazism For example in Germany the American occupation headquarters Office of Military Government OMGUS began its own newspaper based in Munich in 1945 Die Neue Zeitung was edited by German and Jewish emigres who had fled to the United States before the war Its mission was to destroy Nazi cultural remnants and encourage democracy by exposing Germans to the ways American culture operated There was great detail on sports politics business Hollywood fashions and international affairs 21 Despite the restrictions placed by communist authorities Americanization would continue to spread out over the Iron Curtain even before the collapse of the Soviet Union and accelerated afterwards The first McDonald s in Soviet Russia had a grand opening on Moscow s Pushkin Square on 31 January 1990 with approximately 38 000 customers waiting in hours long lines breaking company records at the time 22 By 1997 there were 21 locations of the Russian chain 23 The importation of Little Golden Books Petits Livres d Or to France under the publisher Cocorico after World War II is discussed as a subtle way of implementing cultural productions that presented the economic principles of American liberalism in a favorable light in a study by Cecile Boulaire 24 Foreign versions of American television programs are rebroadcast around the world many of them through American broadcasters and their subsidiaries such as HBO Asia CNBC Europe and CNN International Many of the distributors broadcast American programming on their television channels In 2006 a survey of 20 countries by Radio Times found seven American shows in the ten most watched CSI Miami Lost Desperate Housewives The Simpsons CSI Crime Scene Investigation Without a Trace and The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius 25 nbsp The iconic Hollywood Sign in Los Angeles CaliforniaAmerican films have been historically extremely popular around the world and often dominate cinemas as a result of a high demand of U S product exported to consumers to clear away the outlook of World War II 26 The top 50 highest grossing films of all time were all made entirely or partially in the United States Often part of the negotiating in free trade agreements between the U S and other nations involves screen quotas One such case is Mexico which abolished screen quotas after the establishment of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA with the U S and Canada 27 Many American musicians such as Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson are popular worldwide and have sold over 500 million albums each 28 Michael Jackson s album Thriller at 100 million sales is the best selling album of all time internationally 29 By the study of vocabulary and spelling of English words in books and tweets American English is more common in communities of the European Union than British English This trend is more apparent in the events after World War II and the end of the Soviet Union 30 Business and brands edit nbsp A kosher McDonald s in Ashkelon IsraelMany of the world s largest companies such as Alphabet Google Amazon AT amp T Apple Coca Cola Disney General Motors McDonald s Nike Meta Microsoft Pepsi and Walmart were founded and are headquartered in the United States 12 Of the world s 500 largest companies 124 are headquartered in the U S 12 Coca Cola which previously held the top spot is often viewed as a symbol of Americanization 11 giving rise to the term Coca Cola diplomacy for anything emblematic of U S soft power The American fast food industry the world s first and largest is also often viewed as being a symbol of U S marketing dominance Companies such as McDonald s 31 Burger King Pizza Hut Kentucky Fried Chicken and Domino s Pizza among others have numerous outlets around the world nbsp Starbucks Coffee in Xi an China nbsp Burger King in Ankara TurkeyMany of the world s biggest computer companies are also U S based such as Microsoft Apple Intel HP Inc Dell and IBM and much of the software bought worldwide is created by U S based companies Carayannis and Campbell note The United States occupies also in global terms a very strong position in the software sector 32 Even as far back as 1900 some observers saw Americanization as synonymous with progress and innovation 4 In Germany during the 1920s the American efficiency movement was called rationalization and was a powerful social and economic force In part it looked explicitly at American models especially Fordism 33 Rationalization meant higher productivity and greater efficiency and promised that science would bring prosperity More generally it promised a new level of modernity and was applied to economic production and consumption as well as public administration Various versions of rationalization were promoted by industrialists and social democrats by engineers and architects by educators and academics by middle class feminists and social workers by government officials and politicians of many parties As ideology and practice rationalization challenged and transformed not only machines factories and vast business enterprises but also the lives of middle class and working class Germans 34 Department stores threatened the more local businesses with low prices and chain managed stores The small businesses were determined and fought back to protect their source of income from the U S market 35 During the Cold War Americanization was the method to counter the processes of Sovietization around the world Education schools and particularly universities became the main target for Americanization However resistance to Americanization of the university community restrained it 13 although it was still much more successful than Sovietization 14 6 Visibility edit nbsp Koc University one of the top universities in Turkey is based on the American model The university also has an American football team the Koc Rams From 1950 to 1965 American investments in Europe soared by 800 to 13 9 billion and in the European Economic Community they rose ten times to 6 25 billion Europe s share of American investments increased from 15 to 28 The investments were of very high visibility and generated much talk of Americanization Even so American investments in Europe represented only 50 of the total European investment and American owned companies in the European Economic Community employ only 2 or 3 of the total labor force The basic reason for U S investments is no longer lower production costs faster economic growth or higher profits in Europe but the desire to maintain a competitive position based largely on American technological superiority Opposition to U S investments was originally confined to France but later spread to other European countries Public opinion began to resent American advertising and business methods personnel policies and the use of the English language by American companies Criticism was also directed toward the international currency system which was blamed for inflationary tendencies as a result of the dominant position of the U S dollar 15 However by the 1970s European investments in the U S had increased even more rapidly than vice versa and Geir Lundestad finds there was less talk of the Americans buying Europe 16 Recent trends editAmericanization has become more prevalent since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 Until the late 1980s the communist press could be counted on to be especially critical of the United States To some extent Russia continued that role under Vladimir Putin and there are similar tendencies in China Putin in 2013 published an opinion piece in The New York Times that attacked the American tendency to see itself as an exceptional indispensable nation It is extremely dangerous Putin warned to encourage people to see themselves as exceptional whatever the motivation 36 A new dimension of anti Americanism is fear of the pervasiveness of American Internet technology Americanization has arrived through widespread high speed Internet and smartphone technology since 2008 with a large fraction of the new apps and hardware being designed in Silicon Valley 17 In Europe there is growing concern about excess Americanization through Google Facebook Twitter the iPhone and Uber among many other American Internet based corporations European governments have increasingly expressed concern about privacy issues as well as antitrust and taxation issues regarding the new American giants There is a fear that they are significantly evading taxes and posting information that may violate European privacy laws 37 The Wall Street Journal in 2015 reported deep concerns in Europe s highest policy circles about the power of U S technology companies 38 Historiography editThe Americanization of the Navajo at Canyon de Chelly was carried out by the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the late 1800s 39 In 1902 the British journalist William Stead used this term in the title of his book The Americanization of the World in which he discussed the growing popularity of the American ideas 5 Berghahn 2010 analyzes the debate on the usefulness of the concepts of Americanization and Westernization He reviews the recent research on the European American relationship during the Cold War that has dealt with the cultural influence of the United States upon Europe He then discusses the relevant work on this subject in the fields of economic and business history Overall the article tries to show that those who have applied the concept of Americanization to their research on cultural or economic history have been well aware of the complexities of trans Atlantic relations in this period whether they were viewed as a two way exchange or as a process of circulation 5 Francis Fukuyama argue that the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 prompted a unipolar global capitalist reality that meant the end of history 40 Some see this as a flawed view mired in US exceptionalism John Fousek said the triumphalism embedded in Francis Fukuyama s view that the end of the Cold War marked the end of history constitutes a new historically contingent variation on the ideology that framed conflict in the beginning 41 He argues that the traditional exceptional image of US complete hegemonic power can be quite dangerous because it prompted American intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan which just like in Vietnam proved to show the limitations of American power across the globe 41 However in the eyes of Mary Nolan Americanisation is not an all consuming force and what emerged during 1990 was a multipolar global order 42 Therefore the actual impact the US and Americanisation has on the globe is hotly debated and runs deep into modern political policymaking See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Americanization American culture in the arts and literature American Dream American imperialism Americanization immigration Amerika song Anti American sentiment American stereotypes Americana Cocacolonization Cultural imperialism Debates over Americanization Empire of Liberty Military globalization Neo colonialism Propaganda in the United States McDonaldization Pax Americana Soft Power Westernization IndigenizationReferences edit Azaryahu Maoz October 22 2017 The Golden Arches of McDonald s On the Americanization of Israel Israel Studies 5 1 41 64 JSTOR 30245529 Fraser Nick November 2 2014 How the World Was Won The Americanization of Everywhere review a brilliant essay The Observer Retrieved October 22 2017 via www theguardian com Beck Ulrich Sznaider Natan Winter Rainer October 22 2017 Global America The Cultural Consequences of Globalization Liverpool University Press ISBN 9780853239185 Retrieved October 22 2017 via Google Books a b Stead W T 1901 The Americanization of the World Horace Markley p 393 a b c Berghahn Volker R February 1 2010 The debate on Americanization among economic and cultural historians Cold War History 10 1 107 130 doi 10 1080 14682740903388566 ISSN 1468 2745 S2CID 144459911 Fergie Dexter March 24 2022 How American Culture Ate the World The New Republic ISSN 0028 6583 Retrieved July 3 2022 a b William Hoynes David Croteau Stefania Milan 2011 Media Society Industries Images and Audiences SAGE p 333 ISBN 9781412974202 a b c Michael Pokorny and John Sedgwick 2004 Economic History of Film Routledge p 25 ISBN 9781134344307 Criteria for determining a movie s country of origin are mutable and subjective but are in practice based on fiscal contribution and head office locations which creates a significant advantage for a country with the money and industrial support structure i e Hollywood to fund large scale motion pictures British Films on the Brink of Americanization May 28 2015 a b The Coca Cola Company NYSE Euronext Archived from the original on December 15 2011 Retrieved August 24 2007 a b c Global 500 Fortune Retrieved August 25 2022 a b Natalia Tsvetkova Failure of American and Soviet Cultural Imperialism in German Universities 1945 1990 Boston Leiden Brill 2013 a b c Schroter Harm G December 5 2005 Americanization of the European Economy A compact survey of American economic influence in Europe since the 1800s Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 1 4020 2934 9 a b Niels Grosse American Investments In Europe Europa Archiv 1967 Vol 22 Issue 1 pp 23 32 a b Geir Lundestad 2005 The United States and Western Europe since 1945 from Empire by invitation to transatlantic drift Oxford University Press p 221 ISBN 978 0 19 928397 2 a b Kroes Rob 2003 The Internet An Instrument of Americanization In Beck Ulrich Sznaider Natan Winter Rainer eds Global America The Cultural Consequences of Globalization Liverpool University Press pp 235 256 ISBN 978 0 85323 928 4 Elteren Mel van September 14 2006 Americanism and Americanization A Critical History of Domestic and Global Influence McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 2785 7 Kerrigan Finola 2010 Film Marketing Oxford Butterworth Heinemann p 18 ISBN 9780750686839 Retrieved February 4 2022 Davis Glyn Dickinson Kay Patti Lisa Villarejo Amy 2015 Film Studies A Global Introduction Abingdon Routledge p 299 ISBN 9781317623380 Retrieved August 24 2020 Jessica C E Gienow Hecht Art is democracy and democracy is art Culture propaganda and the Neue Zeitung in Germany Diplomatic History 1999 23 1 pp 21 43 Maynes Charles February 1 2020 McDonald s Marks 30 Years in Russia Voice of America Retrieved March 16 2022 McDonald s Cohon wary as market share slips Charity book details struggle in Russia The Spectator Hamilton ON Canadian Press October 25 1997 p B4 Boulaire Cecile 2023 The Little Golden Books in the Shadow of the CIA or the Americanization of Children s Publishing in Cold War France Book History 26 fall 390 418 CSI show most popular show in the world BBC July 31 2006 Archived from the original on September 2 2007 Retrieved October 23 2013 Hunt Michael 2016 The World Transformed 1945 to the Present New York Oxford pp 96 108 ISBN 978 0 19 937102 0 Dual forces fuel Mexican film industry Adelante Archived from the original on August 11 2007 Retrieved August 29 2007 Frequently Asked Questions Elvis com Archived from the original on September 26 2007 Retrieved August 30 2007 Jackos Back MTV Archived from the original on September 16 2007 Retrieved August 30 2007 Goncalves Bruno Loureiro Porto Lucia Ramasco Jose J Sanchez David July 3 2017 The Fall of the Empire The Americanization of English PLOS ONE 13 5 e0197741 arXiv 1707 00781 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0197741 PMC 5969760 PMID 29799872 Karen DeBres A Cultural Geography of McDonald s UK Journal of Cultural Geography 2005 Elias G Carayannis and David F J Campbell Mode 3 Knowledge Production in Quadruple Helix Innovation Systems 2011 p 42 Noland 1975 Mary Nolan Housework Made Easy the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany s Rationalized Economy Feminist Studies Volume 16 Issue 3 pp 549 Hunt Michael H 2014 The world Transformed 1945 to the present New York New York Oxford University Press p 105 ISBN 9780199371020 Zachary Karabell The Upside of a De Americanized World A reduced U S role is still a lot more powerful than 100 emerging markets but it would force even greater internal focus for the U S The Atlantic 17 Oct 2013 Archived June 28 2017 at the Wayback Machine See Google under fire in Europe over user privacy concerns Toronto Star 8 April 2015 Archived December 22 2017 at the Wayback Machine Tom Fairless Europe s Digital Czar Slams Google Facebook Wall Street Journal 24 Feb 2015 Archived July 8 2017 at the Wayback Machine Dolan Susan Wytsalucy Reagan Lyons Keith 2022 How a Navajo Scientist Is Helping to Restore Traditional Peach Horticulture Features Park Science Vol 36 no 1 Summer 2022 U S National Park Service Retrieved July 7 2022 Fukuyama Francis 2012 The End of History and The Last Man Twentieth Anniversary ed London Penguin pp 8 9 ISBN 9780141927763 a b Fousek John 2000 To Lead the Free World American nationalism and the cultural roots of the Cold War 1st ed Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press p 31 ISBN 0 8078 6067 0 Nolan Mary 2012 The Transatlantic Century Europe and America 1890 2010 1st ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 331 ISBN 978 1 139 56980 4 Further reading editAbdulrahim Masoud A Ali A J Al Kandari and Mohammed Hasanen The Influence of American Television Programs on University Students in Kuwait A Synthesis European Journal of American Culture 28 no 1 2009 57 74 Andrew Anglophone Ed Californication and Cultural Imperialism Baywatch and the Creation of World Culture 1997 Point Sur Malibu University Press Campbell Neil Jude Davies and George McKay eds Issues in Americanisation and Culture Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2004 DeBres Karen A Cultural Geography of McDonald s UK Journal of Cultural Geography 2005 Fehrenbach Heide and Uta G Poiger Americanization Reconsidered in idem eds Transactions Transgressions Transformations American Culture in Western Europe and Japan 2000 Glancy Mark Hollywood and the Americanization of Britain from the 1920s to the present I B Tauris 2013 340 pages ISBN 978 1 84885 407 9 Glancy Mark Temporary American citizens British audiences Hollywood films and the threat of Americanization in the 1920s Historical Journal of Film Radio and Television 2006 26 4 pp 461 84 Graser Marcus Model America EGO European History Online Mainz Institute of European History 2011 retrieved March 8 2021 Haines Gerald K The Americanization of Brazil A Study of U S Cold War Diplomacy in the Third World 1945 54 Scholarly Resources 1993 Hendershot Robert M Family Spats Perception Illusion and Sentimentality in the Anglo American Special Relationship 2008 Hilger Susanne The Americanisation of the European Economy after 1880 European History Online Mainz Institute of European History 2012 retrieved June 6 2012 Kroes Rob American empire and cultural imperialism A view from the receiving end Diplomatic History 23 3 1999 463 477 online Martn Lawrence Pledge of Allegiance The Americanization of Canada in the Mulroney Years Mcclelland amp Stewart Ltd 1993 ISBN 0 7710 5663 X Malchow H L Special Relations The Americanization of Britain Stanford University Press 2011 400 pages explores American influence on the culture and counterculture of metropolitan London from the 1950s to the 1970s from Swinging London to black feminist and gay liberation excerpt and text search Moffett Samuel E The Americanization of Canada 1907 full text online Nolan Mary Visions of Modernity American Business and the Modernization of Germany 1995 Nolan Mary Housework Made Easy the Taylorized Housewife in Weimar Germany s Rationalized Economy Feminist Studies Volume 16 Issue 3 pp 549 Pells Richard Not like Us How Europeans Have Loved Hated and Transformed American Culture since World War II 1997 online Reynolds David Rich relations the American occupation of Britain 1942 1945 1995 Rydell Robert W Rob Kroes Buffalo Bill in Bologna The Americanization of the World 1869 1922 University of Chicago Press 2005 ISBN 0 226 73242 8 Willett Ralph The Americanization of Germany 1945 1949 1989 Zenklusen Stefan A Look Back at a Quarter Century of Globalization Verifying the Thesis of Anglo Americanization Gottingen 2020 ISBN 978 3 7369 7273 5Historiography edit Berghahn Volker R The debate on Americanization among economic and cultural historians Cold War History Feb 2010 10 1 pp 107 30 Kuisel Richard F The End of Americanization or Reinventing a Research Field for Historians of Europe Journal of Modern History 92 3 Sept 2020 pp 602 634 online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Americanization amp oldid 1189199852, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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