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John Dewey’s Philosophy, American-Style 1910-1929: On How Philosophy Was Made American

 
  Refracting history: Ives and Emerson and the Nineteenth-Century European Tradition in America
by Christopher Bruhn
 
  Americanizing Californians: Americanization in California from the Progressive Era through the Red Scare
by Anne Woo-Sam
   
  A Crisis of Identity: The Panama-Pacific International Exposition, 1915
by Susan Luftschein
   
  <Modern American Fashion Design American Indian Style
by Mary Donahue
   
  Expanding The American Experience: The Liberator 1918-1924
by Antoinette Galotola
   
  John Dewey’s Philosophy, American-Style 1910-1929: On How Philosophy Was Made American
by Jonathan Lang
   
  Fifteen Years After: Matthew Baigell’s “American Art and National Identity: the 1920s
by Jane Necol
   
 
 
   
 
   
 
   
 
   
   
  Editor's Note
 
by Jonathan Lang  
Ê
 

Jonathan Sanders Lang is an Associate Professor in the Social Science Department of Borough of Manhattan Community College of The City University of New York where he teaches philosophy, psychology and Science & Technology Studies. He has two Ph.D.s from CUNY, in philosophy (1990) and in developmental psychology (2000). Currently he is attending Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health for a Masters (MPH) in the History of Public Health and Medicine.

e-mail: jl2070@columbia.edu

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