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When I taught in Greece, my students always wanted to tell me everything they hated about America. Most of them, of course, had never been here, and if you asked them about their favorite musician, favorite sports team, favorite movie, favorite TV show, favorite clothing brand, it was usually American. Also, when you asked them where they wanted to go on vacation, it was NYC or LA, and where they wanted to go to college, it was a school in the U.S. I think it's a bit of a love-hate relationship--a good bit of jealousy, resentment, and some rightful anger and indignation, mixed with a bit of grudging admiration.
As travelers, I think the best thing Americans can do is try to dispel some of these anti-American biases by respecting cultural norms, by not comparing everything to how we do it in America, and by listening to others and asking them questions more than talking about ourselves and our country.
(And every once in a while, I think it's good to engage in a bit of heated dialogue. I don't think we always have to stand by and let people attack America/Americans or somehow feel guilty for our citizenship.)
Theresas last blog post..Oh the Horror…That is Moving
Isn't it strange how quickly we make assumptions about others while traveling? It is one of the basic traveling activities...point out the differences and make generalizations!
I think this happens because (on a usual vacation) our time in any one spot is so short, and we want to leave with pat answers for the way things are.
Love your travel writing and pictures!
Turners last blog post..Yes, Japan Has $6000 Fruit
Fortunately for me, I can play the Honduran card instead of American while I'm gone. I already do so here in the country I was born in anyways.
Anthonys last blog post..At Least They'll Be Safe
Maybe not only politics, but also the interference of these brands, artists, cinema, etc. that overload other cultures with North American stuff and end up changing a whole culture. There are countries that hardly speak their mother tongue any more!
Of course people around the world know the difference between politics and the US people, and wouldn't hate a North American only because of what the government has been doing. But it is a fact that there are a lot of people in the US, that never leave the country, and don't even think about leaving, that support these politics. And not less common is that this same person cannot even point Iran on a map.
It might sound weird for people from the US who have grown up into this culture, but for who is looking the picture from outside, and I include myself here, sometimes there is this "Pinky and the Brain" behaviour of world domination that is not comfortable for us. Why North Americans have to be always the best in everything they do? I am not saying they are, I am saying that it seems they think they have this compromise. And not only the best among countries, but even among themselves.
I am sure the US is a great great country!! I've lived there for a few months and met very nice and not so nice people, equally. I'd never say that I hate North Americans, I love a lot of them! But I cannot say that I love all of them or their culture/lifestyle either.
Criss last blog post..Break the inertia
Cause as Theresa said, most of them have never been there....
Nomadic Matts last blog post..Oxford
On the Americans and Travel front, my opinions on that have shifted. After living in Europe and traveling around a bit, it's amazing to me the small distances between places. The US is huge, isolated by water and we get only 2 weeks vaca a year. When you compare to an UK person who can take a weekend in Paris for a few hundred bucks, gets 6 weeks off every year, and the fact you have dozens of countries so nearby, it suddenly seems less impressive to me when an European travels a lot around Europe.
I still think Americans should travel more, but we definitely have some obstacles that Europeans don't have. I think if you magically transported all Americans to Europe, they would travel more too. I guess what I'm trying to say is that Americans or anyone is more of a product of the country they live in and those circumstances than some innate differences. I don't think Americans don't travel internationally because they "LOVE" the US, but more from a practical standpoint. If you think about it, a trip from Boston to Florida would be crossing 2-3 countries in Europe, if not more! So we do travel, we just don't have the same geography.
As far as defending American abroad, I've found that in France at least just being yourself works pretty well. They have some crazy stereotypical ideas of what an "American" is/thinks/looks like/does and when they meet you they see you're just a normal person like them. Then again, I've also learned that some people will always love to hate America and will give you a hard time no matter what you say. Best just to avoid talking to them, you're not going to get anywhere.
Tanyas last blog post..The Art of Packing