(09-12-2012, 10:18 PM)Jester Wrote:(09-12-2012, 09:54 PM)Lissa Wrote: In this case, it's both. There is a well known instance of anti-german rhetoric in the US, especially right after WWI. Ty Cobb was infamously caught sliding into second base against a player of German descent screaming "German! German!" with his spikes set to dig into the leg of the player and crowd at the game was cheering Cobb on. Over the last 100 years, German culture has been both suppressed and opressed within the US.
Kitchener, Ontario used to be Berlin, Ontario. Then WWI happened.
However, my sense is that the post WWII culture was quite different from WWI. Has there been any serious anti-German sentiment since the immediate post-war period? Nobody is attacked or criticized for the schnitzel-and-lederhosen stuff, are they?
-Jester
Up to 1970 there was still some annimosity, but so many of German descent have Americanized that you don't see it hardly at all any more. The thing is, outside of a few very specific instances, German heritage culture doesn't exist in the US anymore whereas you can see celebrations of other cultures within the US and considering a little over 1/6th of the US population has German ancestory, that's pretty telling. So yes, German culture is the most suppressed culture in the US.
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Einstein said Everything is Relative.
Heisenberg said Everything is Uncertain.
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Einstein said Everything is Relative.
Heisenberg said Everything is Uncertain.
Therefore, everything is relatively uncertain.