Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2008/09/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Nathan Wajsman wrote: > I am sure that the term Anglo-Saxon is not accurate in an ethnic > sense, but for better or worse, it is commonly used in continental > Europe (especially in the context of discussing business and > economics) to refer to the USA and UK especially, but sometimes also > including the other main English-speaking countries, i.e. Australia, > NZ and Canada. When people talk about "Anglo-Saxon capitalism", for > example, they refer to an economic system with a light regulatory > touch, limited role for the state, limited worker protection, a high > degree of competition and a higher degree of inequality, just to name > a few of its features--not all of which are negative, since it is > also acknowledged that those countries are more dynamic and inventive > then the Continent. > > I used the term in that sense. And whether you like it or not, > Europeans usually do not make distinctions between the different kind > of Americans. You are just Americans and that's that. In a similar > vein, most people on the Continent simply call inhabitants of Britain > "British" and do not give a hoot whether someone is English, Scottish > or Welsh or from Northern Ireland. > > Another European voice : Same about business and economics here. Yet I think in France, "the English" is the commonly mistaken generic word for the whole of the UK's population and, sometimes, the Republic of Ireland's ... people over the Channel, who have good beer, terric pubs and senoritas, and speak a language we don't understand. Anglo-Saxon rather refers to heritage ; language, culture (common law countries, etc), in part to the Commonwealth of Nations, to name but a few, as opposed to motleyed Asia, "fuzzy" Africa, and Russia, which in many people's minds still includes its former USSR countries... Continental Europe is still marked by the Roman heritage, is more or less founded on civil law, and seems to have a tendency to severe the links between state and religion. I'm not sure there's any bias in the use of the term Anglo-saxon, it is oversimplification due either to lack of knowledge, or of a better term to describe what unifies these countries. NATO can't do, so should the US ever join the Commonwealth that might be it :-D Phx