The conference is hosted jointly by Trinity College Dublin and The Clinton Institute for American Studies at University College Dublin and takes place March 26th - 29th 2010
WELCOME
“The youth of America is their oldest tradition. It has been
going on now for three hundred years.” –Oscar Wilde
Among the first explorers of America, many avowedly went looking for
the fountain of youth. Whether or not this was the goal of all, America
always represented the idea of a fresh start in pre-colonial and
colonial days, and the history of American immigration up to our times
testifies to the power of this image. But the image of America
entertained by the population of the United States on the one hand and
by non-Americans on the other has also been in a state of constant
vacillation. Conflicting images and conceptions have in turn taken hold
of imaginations, structured political arguments and determined
reactions to positions or attitudes adopted by the United States. From
an object of desire and yearning to one of diffidence, fear or
hostility, from being seen as a benevolent power to being rejected for
its unilateralism, the United States has in turn behaved and/or been
perceived as liberator, oppressor, a haven or an evil empire, generous
or selfish, conservative or constantly innovative. Does it still make
sense to think of the United States as the ‘forever young’ country of
the new, in Seymour Martin Lipset’s terms, ‘the First New Nation’?
This conference invites an examination, from all angles and in all periods, of the way images of America (based on reality, prejudice or fancy) impact its self-perception and its perception abroad.
