Word: higham
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Americans have never been profoundly attached to their own history. John Higham, a historian at Johns Hopkins, once met a man who claimed that historical consciousness increases as one travels east. Thus the Californian, in awareness of the past, would be the moral equivalent of the housefly. The Eastern U.S. would be slightly more sophisticated, Western Europe more so. Anyone who travels in Poland, Higham says, cannot help being "overwhelmed by the passionate and complex involvement of the people with their history. We don't have that...
Anti-Catholicism persists, all right. But it is an intricate bigotry, more complicated than racism or antiSemitism, and its origins lie deep in American history. It would be strange if a few years of ecumenical feeling - or simple religious indifference - could obliterate all trace of what Historian John Higham of Johns Hopkins University has called "the most luxuriant, tenacious tradition of paranoiac agitation in American history...
...Kate, Higham...
...Kate, Higham...
...Kate, Higham...