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Anti-English sentiment

Anti-English sentiment, also known as Anglophobia (from Latin Anglus "English" and Greek φόβος, phobos, "fear"), refers to opposition, dislike, fear, hatred, oppression, persecution, and discrimination of English people and/or England.[1] It can be observed in various contexts within the United Kingdom and in countries outside of it. In the UK, Benjamin Disraeli and George Orwell highlighted anti-English sentiments among Welsh, Irish, and Scottish nationalisms. In Scotland, Anglophobia is influenced by Scottish identity. Football matches and tournaments often see manifestations of anti-English sentiment, including assaults and attacks on English individuals. In Wales, historical factors such as English language imposition and cultural suppression have contributed to anti-English sentiment. In Northern Ireland, anti-English sentiment arises from complex historical and political dynamics, including the IRA's targeting of England during the Troubles.

"Gott strafe England" ("May God punish England") on a World War I–era cup

Outside the UK, anti-English sentiment exists in countries like Australia, New Zealand, France, Ireland, Russia, India, the United States, and Argentina. In Australia and New Zealand, stereotypes of English immigrants as complainers have fueled such sentiment. France has historical conflicts with England, like the Hundred Years' War, contributing to animosity. In Ireland and, to a lesser extent, the United States, anti-English sentiment is rooted in Irish nationalism and hostility towards the Anglo-Irish community. Russia has seen waves of Anglophobia due to historical events and suspicions of British meddling. Argentina's anti-British sentiment is linked to the Falklands War and perceptions of British imperialism.

Generally, the term is sometimes used more loosely as a synonym for anti-British sentiment.[1] Its opposite is Anglophilia.

Within the United Kingdom edit

British statesman and Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli said that the proud English were sprung from "a horde of Baltic pirates who were never heard of in the greater annals of the world."[2] In his essay "Notes on Nationalism", written in May 1945 and published in the first issue of the intellectual magazine Polemic (October 1945), George Orwell wrote that "Welsh, Irish and Scottish nationalism have points of difference but are alike in their anti-English orientation".[3]

Scotland edit

A 2005 study by Hussain and Millar of the Department of Politics at the University of Glasgow examined the prevalence of Anglophobia in relation to Islamophobia in Scotland. One finding of the report suggested that national "phobias" have common roots independent of the nations they are directed towards. The study states that

Scottish identity comes close to rivalling low levels of education as an influence towards Anglophobia. Beyond that, having an English friend reduces Anglophobia by about as much as having a Muslim friend reduces Islamophobia. And lack of knowledge about Islam probably indicates a broader rejection of the 'other', for it has as much impact on Anglophobia as on Islamophobia.[4]

The study goes on to say (of the English living in Scotland): "Few of the English (only 16 per cent) see the conflict between Scots and English as even 'fairly serious'." Hussain and Millar's study found that Anglophobia was slightly less prevalent than Islamophobia but that, unlike Islamophobia, Anglophobia correlated with a strong sense of Scottish identity.

In 1999, an inspector and race relations officer with Lothian and Borders Police said that a correlation had been noticed between the establishment of the Scottish Parliament and anti-English incidents.[5] Hussain and Millar's research suggested that Anglophobia had fallen slightly since the introduction of devolution.[6]

In 2009, a woman originally from England was assaulted in an allegedly anti-English racially motivated attack.[7] Similar cases have been connected with football matches and tournaments, particularly international tournaments where the English and Scottish football teams often compete with each other.[8][9][10] A spate of anti-English attacks occurred in 2006 during the FIFA World Cup.[11] In one incident a 7-year-old boy wearing an England shirt was punched in the head in an Edinburgh park.[12]

In 1998, 19 year-old apprentice mechanic Mark Ayton was punched to the ground and kicked to death by three youths. The father of the victim explicitly cited Ayton's English accent as a contributing factor in the attack. [13][14] Court proceedings recorded the fact that the attackers were singing 'Flower of Scotland' which includes the lines 'And sent them homeward, Tae think again'; an allusion about ridding Scotland of the English, immediately prior to the attack. [15] The attackers served less than a year in prison for the killing. [16]

In 2017, former Scottish Journalist of the Year Kevin McKenna penned an article in The National labelling English people living in Scotland as 'colonising wankers' .[17]

In 2020, groups of Scottish nationalists picketed the English border, airports and railway stations sporting hazmat suits and dogs intent on stopping English people from crossing the England-Scotland border.[18] The Scottish Secretary Alistair Jack accused Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon of having incited the incident by inaccurately using Covid statistics to stoke anti-English sentiment [19]

Wales edit

The Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542, also known as the "Acts of Union", passed by the Parliament of England, annexed Wales to the Kingdom of England and replaced the Welsh language and Welsh law with the English language and English law.[20][21] Section 20 of the 1535 Act made English the only language of the law courts and stated that those who used Welsh would not be appointed to any public office in Wales.[20] The Welsh language was supplanted in many public spheres with the use of the Welsh Not in some schools. The Not, the use of which was never government policy, was later described as a symbol of English cultural oppression.[22]

Since the Glyndŵr Rising of the early 15th century, Welsh nationalism has been primarily non-violent.[23] The Welsh militant group Meibion Glyndŵr (English: Sons of [Owain] Glyndŵr) were responsible for arson attacks on English-owned second homes in Wales from 1979 to 1994, motivated by cultural anti-English sentiment.[23] Meibion Glyndŵr also attempted arson against several estate agents in Wales and England and against the offices of the Conservative Party in London.[24][25]

In 2000, the Chairman of Swansea Bay Race Equality Council said that "Devolution has brought a definite increase in anti-English behaviour" citing three women who believed that they were being discriminated against in their careers because they could not speak Welsh.[26] In 2001 Dafydd Elis-Thomas, a former leader of Plaid Cymru, said that there was an anti-English strand to Welsh nationalism.[27]

On 21 April 2023, it was reported that Plaid Cymru councillor, Terry Davies had been suspended for a rant of discriminatory xenophobia. Davies referred to two colleagues as "outsiders" after telling them that "Wales is for Welsh people."[28]

On 11 January 2024, It was reported that a note which was sent to an address in Aberystwyth Ceredigion, with racial slurs about English people from Birmingham. The note which called for Brummies to 'go back home to Brummyland'. It also called the West Midlands accent 'vomit-inducing', and urged the occupant to 'take a few thousand, other people back with them'. The note which Dyfed-Powys Police are treating as a hate crime, read: 'Iorwerth Ave was once a nice, quiet, pleasant residential area until a load of [people] from the Midlands hit', and 'Low-life like you should be forced to live in fenced in sites, preferably back where you came from.' [29]

Northern Ireland edit

During the Troubles, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) mainly attacked targets in Northern Ireland and England, not Scotland or Wales, although the IRA planted a bomb at Sullom Voe Terminal in Shetland during a visit by the Queen in May 1981.[30][31] The ancestry of most people in the Loyalist and Unionist communities is Scottish rather than English.[citation needed] In the Protestant community, the English are identified with British politicians and are sometimes resented for their perceived abandonment of loyalist communities.[32]

Outside the United Kingdom edit

In his 1859 essay A Few Words on Non-Intervention, John Stuart Mill notes that England "finds itself, in respect of its foreign policy, held up to obloquy as the type of egoism and selfishness; as a nation which thinks of nothing but of out-witting and out-generalling its neighbours" and urges his fellow countrymen against "the mania of professing to act from meaner motives than those by which we are really actuated".[33]

Australia and New Zealand edit

"Pommy" or "Pom" (probably derived from rhyming slang - pomegranate for immigrant) is a common Australasian and South African slang word for the English, often combined with "whing[e]ing" (complaining) to make the expression "whingeing Pom" – an English immigrant who stereotypically complains about everything.[34] Although the term is sometimes applied to British immigrants generally, it is usually applied specifically to the English, by both Australians and New Zealanders.[35][36] From the 19th century, there were feelings among established Australians that many immigrants from England were poorly skilled, unwanted by their home country and unappreciative of the benefits of their new country.[37]

In recent years, complaints about two newspaper articles blaming English tourists for littering a local beach and calling the English "Filthy Poms" in the headlines and "Poms fill the summer of our discontent", were accepted as complaints and settled through conciliation by the Australian Human Rights Commission when the newspapers published apologies. Letters and articles which referred to English people as "Poms" or "Pommies" did not meet the threshold for racial hatred.[38] In 2007 a complaint to Australia's Advertising Standards Bureau about a television commercial using the term "Pom" was upheld and the commercial was withdrawn.[39]

France edit

 
"Roastbeef" (or "rosbif") is a long-standing Anglophobe French slang term to designate the English or British people. Its origins lies in William Hogarth's francophobic painting The Gate of Calais or O! The Roast Beef of Old England, in which the "roastbeef" allegory is used as a mockery. Its popular use includes films, television shows and sketch comedies.

After the Norman conquest in 1066, Anglo-Norman French replaced Old English as the official language of England. In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, the Plantagenet kings of England lost most of their possessions in France, began to consider England to be their primary domain and turned to the English language. King Edward I, when issuing writs for summoning parliament in 1295, claimed that the King of France planned to invade England and extinguish the English language, "a truly detestable plan which may God avert".[40][41] In 1346, Edward III exhibited in Parliament a forged ordinance, in which Philip VI of France would have called for the destruction of the English nation and country. The Hundred Years' War (1337–1453) between England and France changed societies on both sides of the Channel.

The English and French were engaged in numerous wars in the following centuries. England's conflict with Scotland provided France with an opportunity to destabilise England and there was a firm friendship (known as the Auld Alliance) between France and Scotland from the late-thirteenth century to the mid-sixteenth century. The alliance eventually foundered because of growing Protestantism in Scotland. Opposition to Protestantism became a major feature of later French Anglophobia (and conversely, fear of Catholicism was a hallmark of Francophobia). Antipathy and intermittent hostilities between France and Britain, as distinct from England, continued during later centuries.

Ireland edit

There is a long tradition of Anglophobia within Irish nationalism. Much of this was grounded in the hostility felt by the largely Catholic Irish for the Anglo-Irish people, which was mainly Anglican. In Ireland before the Great Famine, anti-English hostility was deep-seated and was manifested in increased anti-English hostility organised by United Irishmen.[42][43][44] In post-famine Ireland, anti-English hostility was adopted into the philosophy and foundation of the Irish nationalist movement. At the turn of the 20th century, the Celtic Revival movement associated the search for a cultural and national identity with an increasing anti-colonial and anti-English sentiment.[45] Anti-English themes manifested in national organisations seen as promoting native Irish values, with the emergence of groups like Sinn Féin.[citation needed] One popular nationalist slogan was "England's difficulty is Ireland's opportunity" and the well-known anti-World-War-I song "Who is Ireland's Enemy?" used past events to conclude that it was England, and furthermore that Irish people ought to "pay those devils back".[46][47]

The Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) was founded in 1884 as a counter-measure against the Anglo-Irish Athletic Association, which promoted and supervised British sports such as English football in Ireland. The GAA was founded in the anti-English ideas of Thomas Croke, Archbishop of Cashel and Emly.[48] From 1886 to 1971 the GAA focused national pride into distinctly non-English activities.[49] Members were forbidden to belong to organisations that played "English" games and the organisation countered the Anglicisation in Irish society.[50][51][52] With the development in Ireland of Irish games and the arts, the Celtic revivalists and nationalists identified characteristics of what they defined as the "Irish Race". A nationalistic identity developed, as the opposite of the Anglo-Saxons and untainted by the Anglo-Irish.[53] A sense of national identity and Irish distinctiveness as well as an anti-English assertiveness was reinforced to Catholics by teachers in hedge schools.[54]

A feeling of anti-English sentiment intensified within Irish nationalism during the Boer Wars, leading to xenophobia underlined by Anglophobia.[55] Two units of Irish commandos fought with the Boer against British forces during the Second Boer War (1899–1902). J. Donnolly, a member of the brigade, wrote to the editor of the Irish News in 1901:

It was not for the love of the Boer we were fighting; it was for the hatred of the English. (J. Donnolly letter to the Irish News, 1901)[56]

The pro-Boer movement gained widespread support in Ireland, and over 20,000 supporters demonstrated in Dublin in 1899 where Irish nationalism, anti-English and pro-Boer attitudes were one and the same. There was a pro-Boer movement in England as well but the English pro-Boer movement was not based on anti-English sentiments. These opposing views and animosity led the English and Irish pro-Boer groups to maintain a distance from one another.[57] Despite this, far more Irishmen joined various Irish Regiments of the British Army during this time, more so than pro-Boer commandos.

The W. B. Yeats play The Countess Cathleen, written in 1892, has anti-English overtones comparing the English gentry to demons who come for Irish souls.[58] Films set during the Irish War of Independence, such as The Informer (1935) and the Plough and the Stars (1936), were criticised by the BBFC for the director John Ford's anti-English content and in recent years, Michael Collins and The Wind That Shakes the Barley (despite being a joint British-Irish production) have led to accusations of Anglophobia in the British press. In 2006, Antony Booth, the father-in-law of Tony Blair, claimed he was the victim of anti-English vandalism and discrimination while living in County Cavan, Ireland, with his wife.[59][60][61][62][63] In August 2008 an English pipe fitter based in Dublin was awarded €20,000 for the racial abuse and discrimination he received at his workplace.[64]

In 2011, tensions and anti-English or anti-British feelings flared in relation to the proposed visit of Queen Elizabeth II, the first British monarch to visit Ireland in 100 years. The invitation by the President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, and the Irish government, was hailed by the Irish press as a historic visit but was criticised by Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams.[65][66] An anti-Queen demonstration was held at the GPO Dublin by a small group of Irish Republicans on 26 February 2011,[citation needed] and a mock trial and decapitation of an effigy of Queen Elizabeth II were carried out by socialist republican group Éirígí.[67] Other protests included one Dublin publican (the father of Celtic player Anthony Stokes) hanging a banner declaring "the Queen will never be welcome in this country".[68]

In 2018, the Irish author and journalist Megan Nolan wrote an opinion piece for The New York Times that detailed how she had come to hate England and English people.[69]

Russia edit

Despite having formed an alliance between the two nations since Tsarist rule, due to the Great Game, a wave of widespread Anglophobia took hold in Russia, with the fear of English meddling and intervention. During the Russo-Japanese War, there was a sentiment in Russia that England was behind Japan's militarism against Russia in the Far East, leading to a strained relationship between Britain and Russia.[70] The UK and Russia were allies in World War I until the Bolshevik Revolution of 1918, and the capitalistic West became a target for the new Communist International ("Comintern."). In 1924, these tensions were briefly cooled when the Labour government of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald formally recognized the Soviet Union and established diplomatic relations between the two countries. The two were allies again starting in 1941. During the Cold War, Britain firmly sided with the West against the Soviet Union and the relationship between the two continues to remain dubious even today.[71] Before 2018 FIFA World Cup, there had been controversies regarding Anglophobia in Russia.[72]

 
Slum children in New York City drilling under anti-English placards, "Yellow kid" cartoon by Richard F. Outcault from Joseph Pulitzer's Democratic newspaper New York World, 15 March 1896.

United States edit

In the early years of the Republic, Anglophobia was particularly associated with the Jeffersonian Republicans in the 1790s, who warned that close ties with Great Britain were especially dangerous because that nation was an enemy of American Republicanism. By contrast, the opposing Federalist party warned that the Jeffersonians were too sympathetic to the radicalism of the French Revolution. The Origins of the War of 1812 involved claimed violations against American neutrality by the United Kingdom during the Napoleonic Wars. The Treaty of Ghent, ratified in 1815 and ending the War of 1812, established peaceful relations for the two countries that has lasted more than two centuries, though this was stressed at times in the years following the treaty by events such as the Trent Affair of 1861 and the Fenian Raids in 1866–1871.[73]

In the final days of the 1888 presidential campaign, a Republican operative claiming to be a British immigrant in America named Charles F. Murchison tricked the British ambassador Lord Sackville-West into indicating Britain's support for the Democratic candidate Grover Cleveland. The deliberatly fabricated act forced Sackville-west to return to Britain.[74][75]

 
This 1898 depiction of the Great Rapprochement shows Uncle Sam embracing John Bull, while Columbia and Britannia sit together and hold hands.

The Great Rapprochement was the convergence of social and political objectives between the United Kingdom and the United States from 1895 until World War I began in 1914. The most notable sign of improving relations during the Great Rapprochement was Britain's actions during the Spanish–American War (started 1898). Initially Britain supported the Spanish Empire and its colonial rule over Cuba, since the perceived threat of American occupation and a territorial acquisition of Cuba by the United States might harm British trade and commercial interests within its own imperial possessions in the West Indies. However, after the United States made genuine assurances that it would grant Cuba's independence (which eventually occurred in 1902 under the terms dictated in the Platt Amendment), the British abandoned this policy and ultimately sided with the United States, unlike most other European powers who supported Spain. In return the US government supported Britain during the Boer War, although many Americans favoured the Boers.[76]

In 2002, academic John Moser said that, although Anglophobia is now "almost completely absent" from American society, this was not always the case. He stated that "there were strains of Anglophobia present in virtually every populist movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries," with the Populist Party, for example, "referring to England as a 'monster' that had 'seized upon the fresh energy of America and is steadily fixing its fangs into our social life.'"

Reasons suggested for the faltering of Anglophobia included the impact of the Second World War, and reduced political support for Irish nationalist movements compared with that in earlier periods. Moser also said:[77]

In an age when the wealthiest and most influential Americans tended to be associated with things British—the vast majority were of Anglo-Saxon descent, wore English-tailored suits, drove British-made automobiles, and even spoke with affected British accents—it was quite natural for Great Britain to fall within the sights of disaffected populists. In more recent years, however, this has changed. When one thinks of wealth and influence in contemporary America, particularly when one considers those who have made their fortunes in the past thirty years, English culture does not immediately spring to mind.

The film industry is widely perceived to give a British nationality to a disproportionate number of villains.[78]

Anglophobia in the Irish-American community edit

The Irish-American community in the United States has historically shown antipathy towards Britain for its role in controlling Ireland. The large Irish Catholic element provided a major base for demands for Irish independence, and occasioned anti-British rhetoric, especially at election time.[79] Anglophobia thus has been a defining feature of the Irish-American experience. Bolstered by their support of Irish nationalism, Irish-American communities have been staunchly anti-English since the 1850s, and this sentiment is fostered within the Irish-American identity.[80][81] Irish immigrants arrived poor and within a generation or two prospered. Many subscribed cash from their weekly wage to keep up the anti-English agitation.[82] Anglophobia was a common theme in Democratic Party politics.[83] Irish-American newspapers, like the pro-Catholic Truth Teller which was founded in 1825 by an anti-English priest, were influential in the identity of the community.[84]

Anti-English feelings among Irish-Americans spread to American culture through Irish-American performers in popular blackface minstrel shows. These imparted both elements of the Irish-American performers' own national bias, and the popular stereotypical image that the English people were bourgeois, aloof, or upper class.[85] Sentiments quickly turned into direct and violent action when in the 1860s the Fenian Brotherhood Society invaded Canada to provoke a United States-British war in hope it would lead to Irish independence.[86] Violence is said to have included direct action by Fenian sympathisers, with the assassination of Thomas D'Arcy McGee, himself an Irish Canadian and Irish nationalist who was against the invasion, although he was very critical of the Orange Order, and it has long been suspected they were his true killers.[87] Goldwin Smith, professor at Cornell University, wrote in the North American Review that "hatred of England" was used as a tool to win the Irish-American vote.[88] A similar observation was made in 1900 by U.S. Secretary of State John Hay, who criticised the Prairie Populist and his own Democratic party's political pandering to attract the support of the Irish diaspora:

State conventions put on an anti-English plank in their platforms to curry favor with the Irish (whom they want to keep) and the Germans whom they want to seduce. It is too disgusting to have to deal with such sordid lies.[86]

Well into the early 20th century anti-English sentiment was increasing with famine memorials in the Irish-American communities, which "served as a wellspring for their obsessive and often corrosive antipathy," as noted in the British Parliament in 1915:

There is no part of the world where anti-English influences worked so powerfully than in the United States. Almost every Irishman there is the son or grandson of an evicted tenant – evicted in all the horrors of the black 40s. And most of them have heard stories of them from their mother's knee.[89]

Some newspapers, including the San Francisco Leader and the New York Irish World, first published in 1823, were renowned for their anti-English articles.[90] The Irish World blamed the mainland United Kingdom for the depopulation and desolate state of Ireland's industries.[91] One newspaper, the Gaelic American, called a student performance of the British national anthem by some girls of Irish heritage from a convent school an act of disloyalty, where they were taught to reverence the traditions of the hereditary enemy of their race and religion.[91]

A commemorative stamp by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie on a century of peace between America and Great Britain was criticised by the Irish-American press.[91] In recent years American political commentators, such as Pat Buchanan, have highlighted the anti-English stance of the Irish Diaspora in the United States of America.[86]

Argentina edit

In 1982 the two countries fought a small short conflict in the Falklands War, decisively won by the UK. Relations have become friendly since then.[92]

Anglophobia in Argentina has been studied by the historian Ema Cibotti in "Dear Enemies. From Beresford to Maradona, the true story of relations between the English and Argentines". In its prologue, entitled "Against the English it is better", the social historian states

The anti-British sentiment is perhaps one of the most widespread and rooted in our idiosyncrasy, to the point that it has become flesh in football, our most popular sport. “Against the English it is better”, and “He who does not jump is English”, are slogans shouted by millions. Each success of the blue and white team is usually a reason for collective joy, but a victory against the English is much more; it vibrates the national spirit, no matter how dejected it may be at the time. The playing field becomes the stage where society claims the almost two hundred years of usurpation of the Malvinas Islands.

That feeling has not been constant or unanimous. Characters such as Manuel Belgrano, who had faced the English invasions of Buenos Aires in 1806 and 1807 or Mariano Moreno, among the independence leaders, supported policies similar to those of the British and the dispute over the Falkland Islands did not sour relations. The 1929 crisis and the coup that overthrew Hipólito Yrigoyen in 1930, with the fall in export prices, will be the determining factors in the appearance of an Anglophobic sentiment linked to the rejection of neo-colonialism or British imperialism. This is what the Spanish pedagogue Lorenzo Luzuriaga observed upon arriving in Argentina in 1940, who in a letter to Américo Castro analysed the different attitudes towards the outbreak of the World War

People here are very confused. On the one hand, there is economic Anglophobia about alleged British imperialism and exploitation; on the other, the Russophile extremists who have raised the banner of neutrality and indifference to the conflict; on the other, the Francophiles (Victoria Ocampo's group) who do not know what to do with the defection from France, and finally a small Anglophile minority, ready to help in the fight by all means.

Philosopher Mario Bunge, in an interview granted to Jorge Fontevecchia on May 4, 2008, collected in Reportajes 2, alluded to the spread of Anglophobic sentiment in the years of the conflict, explainable "because many of the companies had been owned by the English" and attributed to this feeling the approach to Nazism of Carlos Astrada, introducer of existentialist philosophy in Argentina. But it will be with the Falklands War in 1982 when Anglophobic sentiment spread to a good part of society.

See also edit

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Further reading edit

France edit

  • Acomb, Frances Dorothy. Anglophobia in France, 1763–1789: an essay in the history of constitutionalism and nationalism (Duke University Press, 1950)
  • Bell, Philip J. France and Britain, 1900–1940. Entente and Estrangement (Longman, 1996)
  • Berthon, Simon. Allies at War: The Bitter Rivalry among Churchill, Roosevelt, and de Gaulle (2001). 356 pp.
  • Black, Jeremy. Natural and Necessary Enemies: Anglo-French Relations in the Eighteenth Century (1986)
  • Brunschwig, Henri. Anglophobia and French African Policy (Yale University Press, 1971).
  • Gibson, Robert. The Best of Enemies: Anglo-French Relations Since the Norman Conquest (2nd ed. 2011) major scholarly study excerpt and text search
  • Horne, Alistair, Friend or Foe: An Anglo-Saxon History of France (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005).
  • Johnson, Douglas, et al. Britain and France: Ten Centuries (1980) table of contents
  • Newman, Gerald. "Anti-French Propaganda and British Liberal Nationalism in the Early Nineteenth Century: Suggestions Toward a General Interpretation." Victorian Studies (1975): 385–418. in JSTOR
  • Otte, T. G. "From "War-in-Sight" to Nearly War: Anglo–French Relations in the Age of High Imperialism, 1875–1898." Diplomacy and Statecraft (2006) 17#4 pp: 693–714.
  • Pickles, Dorothy. The Uneasy Entente. French Foreign Policy and Franco-British Misunderstandings (1966)
  • Schmidt, H. D. "The Idea and Slogan of 'Perfidious Albion'" Journal of the History of Ideas (1953) pp: 604–616. in JSTOR; on French distrust of "Albion" (i.e. England)
  • Tombs, R. P. and I. Tombs, That Sweet Enemy: Britain and France, the History of a Love-Hate Relationship (Pimlico, 2007)

Germany edit

  • Frederick, Suzanne Y. "The Anglo-German Rivalry, 1890–1914," pp. 306–336 in William R. Thompson, ed. Great power rivalries (1999) online
  • Geppert, Dominik, and Robert Gerwarth, eds. Wilhelmine Germany and Edwardian Britain: Essays on Cultural Affinity (2009)
  • Görtemaker, Manfred. Britain and Germany in the Twentieth Century (2005)
  • Hoerber, Thomas. "Prevail or perish: Anglo-German naval competition at the beginning of the twentieth century," European Security (2011) 20#1, pp. 65–79.
  • Kennedy, Paul M. "Idealists and realists: British views of Germany, 1864–1939," Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 25 (1975) pp: 137–56; compares the views of idealists (pro-German) and realists (anti-German)
  • Kennedy, Paul. The Rise of the Anglo-German Antagonism 1860–1914 (London, 1980) excerpt and text search; influential synthesis
  • Major, Patrick. "Britain and Germany: A Love-Hate Relationship?" German History, October 2008, Vol. 26 Issue 4, pp. 457–468.
  • Milton, Richard. Best of Enemies: Britain and Germany: 100 Years of Truth and Lies (2004), popular history covers 1845–1945 focusing on public opinion and propaganda; 368pp excerpt and text search
  • Ramsden, John. Don’t Mention the War: The British and the Germans since 1890 (London, 2006).
  • Rüger, Jan. "Revisiting the Anglo-German Antagonism," Journal of Modern History (2011) 83#3, pp. 579–617 in JSTOR
  • Scully, Richard. British Images of Germany: Admiration, Antagonism, and Ambivalence, 1860–1914 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012) 375pp

United States edit

  • Cook, James G. Anglophobia: An Analysis of Anti-British Prejudice in the United States (1919) online
  • Crapol, Edward P. America for Americans: Economic Nationalism and Anglophobia in the Late Nineteenth Century (Greenwood, 1973)
  • Frost, Jennifer. "Dissent and Consent in the" Good War": Hedda Hopper, Hollywood Gossip, and World War II Isolationism." Film History: An International Journal 22#2 (2010): 170–181.
  • Ellis, Sylvia. Historical Dictionary of Anglo-American Relations (2009) and text search
  • Foreman, Amanda. A World on Fire: Britain’s Crucial Role in the American Civil War (Random House, 2011), 958 pp.
    • Geoffrey Wheatcroft, "How the British Nearly Supported the Confederacy," New York Times Sunday Book Review June 30, 2011 online
  • Gleason, Mark C. From Associates to Antagonists: The United States, Great Britain, the First World War, and the Origins of War Plan Red, 1914–1919 (PhD. Dissertation University of North Texas, 2012); Online; "War Plan Red" was the American Army's plan for war against Great Britain.
  • Haynes, Sam W. Unfinished Revolution: The Early American Republic in a British World (2010)
  • Louis, William Roger; Imperialism at Bay: The United States and the Decolonization of the British Empire, 1941–1945 (1978)
  • Moser, John E. Twisting the Lion's Tail: American Anglophobia between the World Wars (New York University Press, 1999)
  • Perkins, Bradford. Prologue to war: England and the United States, 1805–1812 (1961) full text online
  • Peskin, Lawrence A. "Conspiratorial Anglophobia and the War of 1812." Journal of American History 98#3 (2011): 647–669.
  • Tuffnell, Stephen. ""Uncle Sam is to be Sacrificed": Anglophobia in Late Nineteenth-Century Politics and Culture." American Nineteenth Century History 12#1 (2011): 77–99.

Anglophobic publications edit

  • Gelli, Frank Julian. The Dark Side of England, (London, 2014, ASIN B00QJ19TXI)

anti, english, sentiment, prejudice, against, british, people, whole, anti, british, sentiment, hostility, towards, british, state, foreign, relations, united, kingdom, anglophobe, redirects, here, confused, with, anglophone, also, known, anglophobia, from, la. For prejudice against British people as a whole see Anti British sentiment For hostility towards the British state see Foreign relations of the United Kingdom Anglophobe redirects here Not to be confused with Anglophone Anti English sentiment also known as Anglophobia from Latin Anglus English and Greek fobos phobos fear refers to opposition dislike fear hatred oppression persecution and discrimination of English people and or England 1 It can be observed in various contexts within the United Kingdom and in countries outside of it In the UK Benjamin Disraeli and George Orwell highlighted anti English sentiments among Welsh Irish and Scottish nationalisms In Scotland Anglophobia is influenced by Scottish identity Football matches and tournaments often see manifestations of anti English sentiment including assaults and attacks on English individuals In Wales historical factors such as English language imposition and cultural suppression have contributed to anti English sentiment In Northern Ireland anti English sentiment arises from complex historical and political dynamics including the IRA s targeting of England during the Troubles Gott strafe England May God punish England on a World War I era cupOutside the UK anti English sentiment exists in countries like Australia New Zealand France Ireland Russia India the United States and Argentina In Australia and New Zealand stereotypes of English immigrants as complainers have fueled such sentiment France has historical conflicts with England like the Hundred Years War contributing to animosity In Ireland and to a lesser extent the United States anti English sentiment is rooted in Irish nationalism and hostility towards the Anglo Irish community Russia has seen waves of Anglophobia due to historical events and suspicions of British meddling Argentina s anti British sentiment is linked to the Falklands War and perceptions of British imperialism Generally the term is sometimes used more loosely as a synonym for anti British sentiment 1 Its opposite is Anglophilia Contents 1 Within the United Kingdom 1 1 Scotland 1 2 Wales 1 3 Northern Ireland 2 Outside the United Kingdom 2 1 Australia and New Zealand 2 2 France 2 3 Ireland 2 4 Russia 2 5 United States 2 5 1 Anglophobia in the Irish American community 2 6 Argentina 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 5 1 France 5 2 Germany 5 3 United States 5 4 Anglophobic publicationsWithin the United Kingdom editBritish statesman and Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli said that the proud English were sprung from a horde of Baltic pirates who were never heard of in the greater annals of the world 2 In his essay Notes on Nationalism written in May 1945 and published in the first issue of the intellectual magazine Polemic October 1945 George Orwell wrote that Welsh Irish and Scottish nationalism have points of difference but are alike in their anti English orientation 3 Scotland edit See also Scottish national identity and Category England Scotland relations A 2005 study by Hussain and Millar of the Department of Politics at the University of Glasgow examined the prevalence of Anglophobia in relation to Islamophobia in Scotland One finding of the report suggested that national phobias have common roots independent of the nations they are directed towards The study states that Scottish identity comes close to rivalling low levels of education as an influence towards Anglophobia Beyond that having an English friend reduces Anglophobia by about as much as having a Muslim friend reduces Islamophobia And lack of knowledge about Islam probably indicates a broader rejection of the other for it has as much impact on Anglophobia as on Islamophobia 4 The study goes on to say of the English living in Scotland Few of the English only 16 per cent see the conflict between Scots and English as even fairly serious Hussain and Millar s study found that Anglophobia was slightly less prevalent than Islamophobia but that unlike Islamophobia Anglophobia correlated with a strong sense of Scottish identity In 1999 an inspector and race relations officer with Lothian and Borders Police said that a correlation had been noticed between the establishment of the Scottish Parliament and anti English incidents 5 Hussain and Millar s research suggested that Anglophobia had fallen slightly since the introduction of devolution 6 In 2009 a woman originally from England was assaulted in an allegedly anti English racially motivated attack 7 Similar cases have been connected with football matches and tournaments particularly international tournaments where the English and Scottish football teams often compete with each other 8 9 10 A spate of anti English attacks occurred in 2006 during the FIFA World Cup 11 In one incident a 7 year old boy wearing an England shirt was punched in the head in an Edinburgh park 12 In 1998 19 year old apprentice mechanic Mark Ayton was punched to the ground and kicked to death by three youths The father of the victim explicitly cited Ayton s English accent as a contributing factor in the attack 13 14 Court proceedings recorded the fact that the attackers were singing Flower of Scotland which includes the lines And sent them homeward Tae think again an allusion about ridding Scotland of the English immediately prior to the attack 15 The attackers served less than a year in prison for the killing 16 In 2017 former Scottish Journalist of the Year Kevin McKenna penned an article in The National labelling English people living in Scotland as colonising wankers 17 In 2020 groups of Scottish nationalists picketed the English border airports and railway stations sporting hazmat suits and dogs intent on stopping English people from crossing the England Scotland border 18 The Scottish Secretary Alistair Jack accused Scotland s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon of having incited the incident by inaccurately using Covid statistics to stoke anti English sentiment 19 Wales edit See also Cultural relationship between the Welsh and the English The Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542 also known as the Acts of Union passed by the Parliament of England annexed Wales to the Kingdom of England and replaced the Welsh language and Welsh law with the English language and English law 20 21 Section 20 of the 1535 Act made English the only language of the law courts and stated that those who used Welsh would not be appointed to any public office in Wales 20 The Welsh language was supplanted in many public spheres with the use of the Welsh Not in some schools The Not the use of which was never government policy was later described as a symbol of English cultural oppression 22 Since the Glyndŵr Rising of the early 15th century Welsh nationalism has been primarily non violent 23 The Welsh militant group Meibion Glyndŵr English Sons of Owain Glyndŵr were responsible for arson attacks on English owned second homes in Wales from 1979 to 1994 motivated by cultural anti English sentiment 23 Meibion Glyndŵr also attempted arson against several estate agents in Wales and England and against the offices of the Conservative Party in London 24 25 In 2000 the Chairman of Swansea Bay Race Equality Council said that Devolution has brought a definite increase in anti English behaviour citing three women who believed that they were being discriminated against in their careers because they could not speak Welsh 26 In 2001 Dafydd Elis Thomas a former leader of Plaid Cymru said that there was an anti English strand to Welsh nationalism 27 On 21 April 2023 it was reported that Plaid Cymru councillor Terry Davies had been suspended for a rant of discriminatory xenophobia Davies referred to two colleagues as outsiders after telling them that Wales is for Welsh people 28 On 11 January 2024 It was reported that a note which was sent to an address in Aberystwyth Ceredigion with racial slurs about English people from Birmingham The note which called for Brummies to go back home to Brummyland It also called the West Midlands accent vomit inducing and urged the occupant to take a few thousand other people back with them The note which Dyfed Powys Police are treating as a hate crime read Iorwerth Ave was once a nice quiet pleasant residential area until a load of people from the Midlands hit and Low life like you should be forced to live in fenced in sites preferably back where you came from 29 Northern Ireland edit During the Troubles the Irish Republican Army IRA mainly attacked targets in Northern Ireland and England not Scotland or Wales although the IRA planted a bomb at Sullom Voe Terminal in Shetland during a visit by the Queen in May 1981 30 31 The ancestry of most people in the Loyalist and Unionist communities is Scottish rather than English citation needed In the Protestant community the English are identified with British politicians and are sometimes resented for their perceived abandonment of loyalist communities 32 Outside the United Kingdom editIn his 1859 essay A Few Words on Non Intervention John Stuart Mill notes that England finds itself in respect of its foreign policy held up to obloquy as the type of egoism and selfishness as a nation which thinks of nothing but of out witting and out generalling its neighbours and urges his fellow countrymen against the mania of professing to act from meaner motives than those by which we are really actuated 33 Australia and New Zealand edit Further information Australia United Kingdom relations and New Zealand United Kingdom relations Pommy or Pom probably derived from rhyming slang pomegranate for immigrant is a common Australasian and South African slang word for the English often combined with whing e ing complaining to make the expression whingeing Pom an English immigrant who stereotypically complains about everything 34 Although the term is sometimes applied to British immigrants generally it is usually applied specifically to the English by both Australians and New Zealanders 35 36 From the 19th century there were feelings among established Australians that many immigrants from England were poorly skilled unwanted by their home country and unappreciative of the benefits of their new country 37 In recent years complaints about two newspaper articles blaming English tourists for littering a local beach and calling the English Filthy Poms in the headlines and Poms fill the summer of our discontent were accepted as complaints and settled through conciliation by the Australian Human Rights Commission when the newspapers published apologies Letters and articles which referred to English people as Poms or Pommies did not meet the threshold for racial hatred 38 In 2007 a complaint to Australia s Advertising Standards Bureau about a television commercial using the term Pom was upheld and the commercial was withdrawn 39 France edit Further information France United Kingdom relations nbsp Roastbeef or rosbif is a long standing Anglophobe French slang term to designate the English or British people Its origins lies in William Hogarth s francophobic painting The Gate of Calais or O The Roast Beef of Old England in which the roastbeef allegory is used as a mockery Its popular use includes films television shows and sketch comedies After the Norman conquest in 1066 Anglo Norman French replaced Old English as the official language of England In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries the Plantagenet kings of England lost most of their possessions in France began to consider England to be their primary domain and turned to the English language King Edward I when issuing writs for summoning parliament in 1295 claimed that the King of France planned to invade England and extinguish the English language a truly detestable plan which may God avert 40 41 In 1346 Edward III exhibited in Parliament a forged ordinance in which Philip VI of France would have called for the destruction of the English nation and country The Hundred Years War 1337 1453 between England and France changed societies on both sides of the Channel The English and French were engaged in numerous wars in the following centuries England s conflict with Scotland provided France with an opportunity to destabilise England and there was a firm friendship known as the Auld Alliance between France and Scotland from the late thirteenth century to the mid sixteenth century The alliance eventually foundered because of growing Protestantism in Scotland Opposition to Protestantism became a major feature of later French Anglophobia and conversely fear of Catholicism was a hallmark of Francophobia Antipathy and intermittent hostilities between France and Britain as distinct from England continued during later centuries Ireland edit Further information Ireland United Kingdom relations There is a long tradition of Anglophobia within Irish nationalism Much of this was grounded in the hostility felt by the largely Catholic Irish for the Anglo Irish people which was mainly Anglican In Ireland before the Great Famine anti English hostility was deep seated and was manifested in increased anti English hostility organised by United Irishmen 42 43 44 In post famine Ireland anti English hostility was adopted into the philosophy and foundation of the Irish nationalist movement At the turn of the 20th century the Celtic Revival movement associated the search for a cultural and national identity with an increasing anti colonial and anti English sentiment 45 Anti English themes manifested in national organisations seen as promoting native Irish values with the emergence of groups like Sinn Fein citation needed One popular nationalist slogan was England s difficulty is Ireland s opportunity and the well known anti World War I song Who is Ireland s Enemy used past events to conclude that it was England and furthermore that Irish people ought to pay those devils back 46 47 The Gaelic Athletic Association GAA was founded in 1884 as a counter measure against the Anglo Irish Athletic Association which promoted and supervised British sports such as English football in Ireland The GAA was founded in the anti English ideas of Thomas Croke Archbishop of Cashel and Emly 48 From 1886 to 1971 the GAA focused national pride into distinctly non English activities 49 Members were forbidden to belong to organisations that played English games and the organisation countered the Anglicisation in Irish society 50 51 52 With the development in Ireland of Irish games and the arts the Celtic revivalists and nationalists identified characteristics of what they defined as the Irish Race A nationalistic identity developed as the opposite of the Anglo Saxons and untainted by the Anglo Irish 53 A sense of national identity and Irish distinctiveness as well as an anti English assertiveness was reinforced to Catholics by teachers in hedge schools 54 A feeling of anti English sentiment intensified within Irish nationalism during the Boer Wars leading to xenophobia underlined by Anglophobia 55 Two units of Irish commandos fought with the Boer against British forces during the Second Boer War 1899 1902 J Donnolly a member of the brigade wrote to the editor of the Irish News in 1901 It was not for the love of the Boer we were fighting it was for the hatred of the English J Donnolly letter to the Irish News 1901 56 The pro Boer movement gained widespread support in Ireland and over 20 000 supporters demonstrated in Dublin in 1899 where Irish nationalism anti English and pro Boer attitudes were one and the same There was a pro Boer movement in England as well but the English pro Boer movement was not based on anti English sentiments These opposing views and animosity led the English and Irish pro Boer groups to maintain a distance from one another 57 Despite this far more Irishmen joined various Irish Regiments of the British Army during this time more so than pro Boer commandos The W B Yeats play The Countess Cathleen written in 1892 has anti English overtones comparing the English gentry to demons who come for Irish souls 58 Films set during the Irish War of Independence such as The Informer 1935 and the Plough and the Stars 1936 were criticised by the BBFC for the director John Ford s anti English content and in recent years Michael Collins and The Wind That Shakes the Barley despite being a joint British Irish production have led to accusations of Anglophobia in the British press In 2006 Antony Booth the father in law of Tony Blair claimed he was the victim of anti English vandalism and discrimination while living in County Cavan Ireland with his wife 59 60 61 62 63 In August 2008 an English pipe fitter based in Dublin was awarded 20 000 for the racial abuse and discrimination he received at his workplace 64 In 2011 tensions and anti English or anti British feelings flared in relation to the proposed visit of Queen Elizabeth II the first British monarch to visit Ireland in 100 years The invitation by the President of Ireland Mary McAleese and the Irish government was hailed by the Irish press as a historic visit but was criticised by Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams 65 66 An anti Queen demonstration was held at the GPO Dublin by a small group of Irish Republicans on 26 February 2011 citation needed and a mock trial and decapitation of an effigy of Queen Elizabeth II were carried out by socialist republican group Eirigi 67 Other protests included one Dublin publican the father of Celtic player Anthony Stokes hanging a banner declaring the Queen will never be welcome in this country 68 In 2018 the Irish author and journalist Megan Nolan wrote an opinion piece for The New York Times that detailed how she had come to hate England and English people 69 Russia edit Further information Russia United Kingdom relations Despite having formed an alliance between the two nations since Tsarist rule due to the Great Game a wave of widespread Anglophobia took hold in Russia with the fear of English meddling and intervention During the Russo Japanese War there was a sentiment in Russia that England was behind Japan s militarism against Russia in the Far East leading to a strained relationship between Britain and Russia 70 The UK and Russia were allies in World War I until the Bolshevik Revolution of 1918 and the capitalistic West became a target for the new Communist International Comintern In 1924 these tensions were briefly cooled when the Labour government of Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald formally recognized the Soviet Union and established diplomatic relations between the two countries The two were allies again starting in 1941 During the Cold War Britain firmly sided with the West against the Soviet Union and the relationship between the two continues to remain dubious even today 71 Before 2018 FIFA World Cup there had been controversies regarding Anglophobia in Russia 72 nbsp Slum children in New York City drilling under anti English placards Yellow kid cartoon by Richard F Outcault from Joseph Pulitzer s Democratic newspaper New York World 15 March 1896 United States edit Further information United Kingdom United States relations In the early years of the Republic Anglophobia was particularly associated with the Jeffersonian Republicans in the 1790s who warned that close ties with Great Britain were especially dangerous because that nation was an enemy of American Republicanism By contrast the opposing Federalist party warned that the Jeffersonians were too sympathetic to the radicalism of the French Revolution The Origins of the War of 1812 involved claimed violations against American neutrality by the United Kingdom during the Napoleonic Wars The Treaty of Ghent ratified in 1815 and ending the War of 1812 established peaceful relations for the two countries that has lasted more than two centuries though this was stressed at times in the years following the treaty by events such as the Trent Affair of 1861 and the Fenian Raids in 1866 1871 73 In the final days of the 1888 presidential campaign a Republican operative claiming to be a British immigrant in America named Charles F Murchison tricked the British ambassador Lord Sackville West into indicating Britain s support for the Democratic candidate Grover Cleveland The deliberatly fabricated act forced Sackville west to return to Britain 74 75 nbsp This 1898 depiction of the Great Rapprochement shows Uncle Sam embracing John Bull while Columbia and Britannia sit together and hold hands The Great Rapprochement was the convergence of social and political objectives between the United Kingdom and the United States from 1895 until World War I began in 1914 The most notable sign of improving relations during the Great Rapprochement was Britain s actions during the Spanish American War started 1898 Initially Britain supported the Spanish Empire and its colonial rule over Cuba since the perceived threat of American occupation and a territorial acquisition of Cuba by the United States might harm British trade and commercial interests within its own imperial possessions in the West Indies However after the United States made genuine assurances that it would grant Cuba s independence which eventually occurred in 1902 under the terms dictated in the Platt Amendment the British abandoned this policy and ultimately sided with the United States unlike most other European powers who supported Spain In return the US government supported Britain during the Boer War although many Americans favoured the Boers 76 In 2002 academic John Moser said that although Anglophobia is now almost completely absent from American society this was not always the case He stated that there were strains of Anglophobia present in virtually every populist movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries with the Populist Party for example referring to England as a monster that had seized upon the fresh energy of America and is steadily fixing its fangs into our social life Reasons suggested for the faltering of Anglophobia included the impact of the Second World War and reduced political support for Irish nationalist movements compared with that in earlier periods Moser also said 77 In an age when the wealthiest and most influential Americans tended to be associated with things British the vast majority were of Anglo Saxon descent wore English tailored suits drove British made automobiles and even spoke with affected British accents it was quite natural for Great Britain to fall within the sights of disaffected populists In more recent years however this has changed When one thinks of wealth and influence in contemporary America particularly when one considers those who have made their fortunes in the past thirty years English culture does not immediately spring to mind The film industry is widely perceived to give a British nationality to a disproportionate number of villains 78 Anglophobia in the Irish American community edit The Irish American community in the United States has historically shown antipathy towards Britain for its role in controlling Ireland The large Irish Catholic element provided a major base for demands for Irish independence and occasioned anti British rhetoric especially at election time 79 Anglophobia thus has been a defining feature of the Irish American experience Bolstered by their support of Irish nationalism Irish American communities have been staunchly anti English since the 1850s and this sentiment is fostered within the Irish American identity 80 81 Irish immigrants arrived poor and within a generation or two prospered Many subscribed cash from their weekly wage to keep up the anti English agitation 82 Anglophobia was a common theme in Democratic Party politics 83 Irish American newspapers like the pro Catholic Truth Teller which was founded in 1825 by an anti English priest were influential in the identity of the community 84 Anti English feelings among Irish Americans spread to American culture through Irish American performers in popular blackface minstrel shows These imparted both elements of the Irish American performers own national bias and the popular stereotypical image that the English people were bourgeois aloof or upper class 85 Sentiments quickly turned into direct and violent action when in the 1860s the Fenian Brotherhood Society invaded Canada to provoke a United States British war in hope it would lead to Irish independence 86 Violence is said to have included direct action by Fenian sympathisers with the assassination of Thomas D Arcy McGee himself an Irish Canadian and Irish nationalist who was against the invasion although he was very critical of the Orange Order and it has long been suspected they were his true killers 87 Goldwin Smith professor at Cornell University wrote in the North American Review that hatred of England was used as a tool to win the Irish American vote 88 A similar observation was made in 1900 by U S Secretary of State John Hay who criticised the Prairie Populist and his own Democratic party s political pandering to attract the support of the Irish diaspora State conventions put on an anti English plank in their platforms to curry favor with the Irish whom they want to keep and the Germans whom they want to seduce It is too disgusting to have to deal with such sordid lies 86 Well into the early 20th century anti English sentiment was increasing with famine memorials in the Irish American communities which served as a wellspring for their obsessive and often corrosive antipathy as noted in the British Parliament in 1915 There is no part of the world where anti English influences worked so powerfully than in the United States Almost every Irishman there is the son or grandson of an evicted tenant evicted in all the horrors of the black 40s And most of them have heard stories of them from their mother s knee 89 Some newspapers including the San Francisco Leader and the New York Irish World first published in 1823 were renowned for their anti English articles 90 The Irish World blamed the mainland United Kingdom for the depopulation and desolate state of Ireland s industries 91 One newspaper the Gaelic American called a student performance of the British national anthem by some girls of Irish heritage from a convent school an act of disloyalty where they were taught to reverence the traditions of the hereditary enemy of their race and religion 91 A commemorative stamp by philanthropist Andrew Carnegie on a century of peace between America and Great Britain was criticised by the Irish American press 91 In recent years American political commentators such as Pat Buchanan have highlighted the anti English stance of the Irish Diaspora in the United States of America 86 Argentina edit Further information Argentina United Kingdom relations In 1982 the two countries fought a small short conflict in the Falklands War decisively won by the UK Relations have become friendly since then 92 Anglophobia in Argentina has been studied by the historian Ema Cibotti in Dear Enemies From Beresford to Maradona the true story of relations between the English and Argentines In its prologue entitled Against the English it is better the social historian states The anti British sentiment is perhaps one of the most widespread and rooted in our idiosyncrasy to the point that it has become flesh in football our most popular sport Against the English it is better and He who does not jump is English are slogans shouted by millions Each success of the blue and white team is usually a reason for collective joy but a victory against the English is much more it vibrates the national spirit no matter how dejected it may be at the time The playing field becomes the stage where society claims the almost two hundred years of usurpation of the Malvinas Islands That feeling has not been constant or unanimous Characters such as Manuel Belgrano who had faced the English invasions of Buenos Aires in 1806 and 1807 or Mariano Moreno among the independence leaders supported policies similar to those of the British and the dispute over the Falkland Islands did not sour relations The 1929 crisis and the coup that overthrew Hipolito Yrigoyen in 1930 with the fall in export prices will be the determining factors in the appearance of an Anglophobic sentiment linked to the rejection of neo colonialism or British imperialism This is what the Spanish pedagogue Lorenzo Luzuriaga observed upon arriving in Argentina in 1940 who in a letter to Americo Castro analysed the different attitudes towards the outbreak of the World War People here are very confused On the one hand there is economic Anglophobia about alleged British imperialism and exploitation on the other the Russophile extremists who have raised the banner of neutrality and indifference to the conflict on the other the Francophiles Victoria Ocampo s group who do not know what to do with the defection from France and finally a small Anglophile minority ready to help in the fight by all means Philosopher Mario Bunge in an interview granted to Jorge Fontevecchia on May 4 2008 collected in Reportajes 2 alluded to the spread of Anglophobic sentiment in the years of the conflict explainable because many of the companies had been owned by the English and attributed to this feeling the approach to Nazism of Carlos Astrada introducer of existentialist philosophy in Argentina But it will be with the Falklands War in 1982 when Anglophobic sentiment spread to a good part of society See also edit nbsp England portalAnglophile Racism Anti Canadian sentiment Quebec where anti Anglophone sentiment is often described as Anglophobia List of phobias Perfidious Albion Views of Lyndon LaRouche and the LaRouche movement Stereotypes of British peopleReferences edit a b Oxford Dictionary of English Oxford University Press 2005 Israel The Anglo Jewish origins of the nation Marginalia LA Review of Books Archived from the original on 24 October 2021 Retrieved 16 June 2021 George Orwell Notes on Nationalism Essay see Positive 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football fans of anti British sentiment in Russia Euronews H C Allen Great Britain and the United States A History of Anglo American Relations 1783 1952 1954 online Charles S Campbell The Dismissal of Lord Sackville Mississippi Valley Historical Review 44 4 1958 635 648 online George Brooks Anglophobia in the United States Some Light on the Presidential Election Westminster Review 130 1 1888 736 756 online Dumbrell John 2009 America s Special Relationships Allies and Clients Taylor amp Francis p 31 ISBN 9780415483766 Moser John John Moser The Decline of American Anglophobia Personal ashland edu Archived from the original on 21 June 2013 Retrieved 21 May 2009 Fenton Ben 19 June 2001 Brenglish in a snit over Hollywood s history lessons The Telegraph London Archived from the original on 15 February 2014 Retrieved 21 May 2009 William C Reuter The Anatomy of Political Anglophobia in the United States 1865 1900 Mid America 1979 61 2 pp 117 132 Simon James Potter Newspapers and Empire in Ireland and Britain Reporting the British Empire c 1857 1921 Four Courts Press 2004 p 216 Arthur Gribben The Great Famine and the Irish Diaspora in America University of Massachusetts Press 1999 p 220 The Century Volume 26 1883 https books google com books id x1aQWbz eYAC amp dq irish anti english amp source gbs navlinks s Davies Gareth and Julian E Zelizer eds America at the Ballot Box Elections and Political History 2015 pp 98 117 Ronald H Bayor and Timothy J Meagher The New York Irish Johns Hopkins University Press 1997 p 74 Robert Nowatzki Representing African Americans in Transatlantic Abolitionism and Blackface Minstrelsy p 181 LSU Press 2010 a b c Patrick J Buchanan A Republic Not an Empire Reclaiming America s Destiny p 334 Regnery Publishing 2002 Robert Nowatzki LSU Press 2010 Social Science p 181 Kim C Sturgess Shakespeare and the American Nation Cambridge University Press 2004 p 46 Arthur Gribben The Great Famine and the Irish Diaspora in America Clark Dennis The Irish in Philadelphia Ten Generations of Urban experience Temple University Press 1982 p 110 a b c Arthur Gribben The Great Famine and the Irish Diaspora in America University of Massachusetts Press 1999 p 228 Martin Robson The UK and Argentina Economic Interdependence Informal Empire or Just Good Friends Navies and Maritime Policies in the South Atlantic 2019 97 124 Further reading editFrance edit Acomb Frances Dorothy Anglophobia in France 1763 1789 an essay in the history of constitutionalism and nationalism Duke University Press 1950 Bell Philip J France and Britain 1900 1940 Entente and Estrangement Longman 1996 Berthon Simon Allies at War The Bitter Rivalry among Churchill Roosevelt and de Gaulle 2001 356 pp Black Jeremy Natural and Necessary Enemies Anglo French Relations in the Eighteenth Century 1986 Brunschwig Henri Anglophobia and French African Policy Yale University Press 1971 Gibson Robert The Best of Enemies Anglo French Relations Since the Norman Conquest 2nd ed 2011 major scholarly study excerpt and text search Horne Alistair Friend or Foe An Anglo Saxon History of France Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2005 Johnson Douglas et al Britain and France Ten Centuries 1980 table of contents Newman Gerald Anti French Propaganda and British Liberal Nationalism in the Early Nineteenth Century Suggestions Toward a General Interpretation Victorian Studies 1975 385 418 in JSTOR Otte T G From War in Sight to Nearly War Anglo French Relations in the Age of High Imperialism 1875 1898 Diplomacy and Statecraft 2006 17 4 pp 693 714 Pickles Dorothy The Uneasy Entente French Foreign Policy and Franco British Misunderstandings 1966 Schmidt H D The Idea and Slogan of Perfidious Albion Journal of the History of Ideas 1953 pp 604 616 in JSTOR on French distrust of Albion i e England Tombs R P and I Tombs That Sweet Enemy Britain and France the History of a Love Hate Relationship Pimlico 2007 Germany edit Frederick Suzanne Y The Anglo German Rivalry 1890 1914 pp 306 336 in William R Thompson ed Great power rivalries 1999 online Geppert Dominik and Robert Gerwarth eds Wilhelmine Germany and Edwardian Britain Essays on Cultural Affinity 2009 Gortemaker Manfred Britain and Germany in the Twentieth Century 2005 Hoerber Thomas Prevail or perish Anglo German naval competition at the beginning of the twentieth century European Security 2011 20 1 pp 65 79 Kennedy Paul M Idealists and realists British views of Germany 1864 1939 Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 25 1975 pp 137 56 compares the views of idealists pro German and realists anti German Kennedy Paul The Rise of the Anglo German Antagonism 1860 1914 London 1980 excerpt and text search influential synthesis Major Patrick Britain and Germany A Love Hate Relationship German History October 2008 Vol 26 Issue 4 pp 457 468 Milton Richard Best of Enemies Britain and Germany 100 Years of Truth and Lies 2004 popular history covers 1845 1945 focusing on public opinion and propaganda 368pp excerpt and text search Ramsden John Don t Mention the War The British and the Germans since 1890 London 2006 Ruger Jan Revisiting the Anglo German Antagonism Journal of Modern History 2011 83 3 pp 579 617 in JSTOR Scully Richard British Images of Germany Admiration Antagonism and Ambivalence 1860 1914 Palgrave Macmillan 2012 375ppUnited States edit Cook James G Anglophobia An Analysis of Anti British Prejudice in the United States 1919 online Crapol Edward P America for Americans Economic Nationalism and Anglophobia in the Late Nineteenth Century Greenwood 1973 Frost Jennifer Dissent and Consent in the Good War Hedda Hopper Hollywood Gossip and World War II Isolationism Film History An International Journal 22 2 2010 170 181 Ellis Sylvia Historical Dictionary of Anglo American Relations 2009 and text search Foreman Amanda A World on Fire Britain s Crucial Role in the American Civil War Random House 2011 958 pp Geoffrey Wheatcroft How the British Nearly Supported the Confederacy New York Times Sunday Book Review June 30 2011 online Gleason Mark C From Associates to Antagonists The United States Great Britain the First World War and the Origins of War Plan Red 1914 1919 PhD Dissertation University of North Texas 2012 Online War Plan Red was the American Army s plan for war against Great Britain Haynes Sam W Unfinished Revolution The Early American Republic in a British World 2010 Louis William Roger Imperialism at Bay The United States and the Decolonization of the British Empire 1941 1945 1978 Moser John E Twisting the Lion s Tail American Anglophobia between the World Wars New York University Press 1999 Perkins Bradford Prologue to war England and the United States 1805 1812 1961 full text online Peskin Lawrence A Conspiratorial Anglophobia and the War of 1812 Journal of American History 98 3 2011 647 669 online Tuffnell Stephen Uncle Sam is to be Sacrificed Anglophobia in Late Nineteenth Century Politics and Culture American Nineteenth Century History 12 1 2011 77 99 Anglophobic publications edit Gelli Frank Julian The Dark Side of England London 2014 ASIN B00QJ19TXI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti English sentiment amp oldid 1217288627, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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