The exceptionalism of Germany and France is less unusual than most Americans think. |
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The rejection of international institutions and stable alliances is a signature aspect of this militant new exceptionalism. |
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The exceptionalism of American history is thereby brought into question, with a somewhat ominous message. |
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Commonality replaced conflict, and the consensus historians uncritically celebrated American exceptionalism and social peace. |
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It is obvious that we can no longer rely on our exceptionalism to keep us safe. |
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The author is repetitive in his claims for American exceptionalism with regard to planning. |
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In doing so, he reveals the intimate connection between liberal narratives of race and the discourse of American exceptionalism. |
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What is troubling about this rhetoric of Irish exceptionalism is that not too long ago, it had an opposite, but equally extreme, flavour. |
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These possibilities may have complicated the search for the Great American Thing and subverted theories of American exceptionalism. |
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It represents, I believe, the best chance the SNP has to develop its exceptionalism beyond its demand for independence and into a wider platform. |
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The idea of American exceptionalism was expressed domestically in the doctrine of manifest destiny. |
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And Guggisberg insists that all national history must contain an element of exceptionalism to give shape to national identity. |
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We ought to guard that evidence of American exceptionalism with great care and forethought. |
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Did America's divided democracy produce the country's exceptionalism, or did a series of exceptional circumstances produce America's peculiar divided democracy? |
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We have yielded ourselves up to tribalism and exceptionalism in the most profound and destructive way. |
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At a presidential forum, he was asked if he saw American exceptionalism through good deeds and volunteerism. |
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In pointing to the alleged exceptionalism of the United States, they fail entirely to take into account the unique role of American capitalism as the dominant world power. |
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But American exceptionalism has merely delayed secularization, not halted it. |
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This relates to American exceptionalism, which makes great allowances for seemingly hypocritical or duplicitous behavior as conducted by our leaders. |
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Following this presentation, a discussion raised the issue of Iranian exceptionalism. |
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Let's lead 'em to the safe harbor of American renewal and the shores of American exceptionalism. |
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But the Mandela legacy has also given South Africa a distorted sense of exceptionalism. |
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From eavesdropping to exceptionalism, the filmmaker explains why America is a sick country. |
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In this regard he draws on the historical philosophy of American exceptionalism, an attitude shared by many of his contemporaries in the United States. |
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Today, a belief in human exceptionalism is distinctly out of fashion. |
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Mr Obama's politically compulsory declarations of America's exceptionalism have always struck me as rote, a little less than heartfelt, even a bit grudging. |
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More militarism and exceptionalism are the last things America needs if it is ever to regain prestige and admiration. You also seem to think that foreign bases are not examples of militarism. |
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This issue is about more than style-it is a form of Iranian exceptionalism and offers a concrete impediment to accepting Iran as a legitimate player in the regional system. |
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At this first ever event, students from France's prestigious engineering and business colleges known as the Grandes Ecoles, will meet to participate in a sports competition, under the banner of exceptionalism and team spirit. |
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Exemptionalism means that Canada is exempted from measures applied to other countries, while exceptionalism means that Canada is treated differently from other allies. |
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Pointing out the problems inherent in such genetic exceptionalism, Dr. Knoppers spoke of the need for a common approach to identifiability, one that will enable the science community to act in the best interests of humanity. |
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American exceptionalism has become a theme of our immigration debate. |
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To justify religious exceptionalism, we see how the 'enemy' has to be othered, through new mythologies and demonologies. |
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But few could match the bred-in-the-bone exceptionalism rooted deep in America's self-image. |
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Max Weber was a pioneer in delineating a connection between capitalism and exceptionalism. |
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In earlier texts, Maximiliano Korstanje explores the American exceptionalism and its effects on the current means of productions. |
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Very cautiously I submit that part of the exceptionalism of the Third Reich lies in its unyieldingness, the electric severity with which it repels our contact and our grip. |
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When devoManc broke cover in November, other cities were not pleased, so much so that Bernstein worried that Manchester's exceptionalism might undermine the deal. |
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At the heart of Brooks and others' complaints lies Americans' desperate wish to believe that the story of our uniqueness and exceptionalism is an unqualified truth. |
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At the same time, the story that he wants to tell the American people demands a reburnishing of traditional notions of American exceptionalism, mission and leadership. |
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The socialization of national identity, such as socializing national pride and a sense of the country's exceptionalism contributes to harmony among ethnic groups. |
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