
“Individualism is rather like innocence; there must be something unconscious about it.”
Company Manners: A Cultural Inquiry into American Life (1954)
The Technological Society (1954)
“Individualism is rather like innocence; there must be something unconscious about it.”
Company Manners: A Cultural Inquiry into American Life (1954)
pdf, A Century of Negotiations: The Changing Sphere of the Woman Dancer in India, 1 December 2013, Performancestudies.ucla.edu, 15-16 http://www.performancestudies.ucla.edu/downloads/SarkarNegotiation.pdf.,
The Secret of Efficient Expression (1911)
Source: 1900s, Up From Slavery (1901), Chapter XVI: Europe
Context: In one thing, at least, I feel sure that the English are ahead of Americans, and that is, they have learned how to get more out of life. The home life of the English seems to me to be about as perfect as anything can be. Everything moves like clockwork. I was impressed, too, with the deference that the servants show to their "masters" and "mistresses" - terms which I suppose would not be tolerated in America. The English servant expects, as a rule, to be nothing but a servant, and so he perfects himself in the art to a degree that no class of servants in America has yet reached. In our country the servant expects to become, in a few years, a "master" himself. Which system is preferable? I will not venture an answer.
“The Founders conceived government as the servant, not the master of the individual.”
Remarks to the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/education/bsa/citizenship_merit_badge/speeches/address_convention_hall.pdf (31 January 1962)
1960s
Source: The Characteristics of the Present Age (1806), p. 12
Source: The Doctrine of the Mean
Part 4, 1979 - 1984 "Welcome to the 1980's", p. 322
Memoirs (1993)