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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Naming  



1.1  Anglo-Saxon in modern usage  





1.2  19th-century Anglo-Saxonism  





1.3  Other European ethnicities  







2 Culture  



2.1  Education  





2.2  Politics  





2.3  Wealth  





2.4  Location  





2.5  Social values  





2.6  Social Register  





2.7  Fashion  







3 Social and political influence  



3.1  PostWorld War II  





3.2  Hostile epithet  







4 In media  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 Further reading  





8 External links  














White Anglo-Saxon Protestants: Difference between revisions






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Citing [[Gallup (company)|Gallup]] polling data from 1976, Kit and Frederica Konolige wrote in their 1978 book ''The Power of Their Glory'', "As befits a church that belongs to the worldwide [[Anglican Communion]], Episcopalianism has the [[United Kingdom]] to thank for the ancestors of fully 49 percent of its members. ... The stereotype of the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) finds its fullest expression in the Episcopal Church."<ref>{{cite book |last=Konolige |first=Kit and Frederica |title=The Power of Their Glory: America's Ruling Class: The Episcopalians |publisher=Wyden Books |location=New York |year=1978 |page=28 |isbn=0-88326-155-3}}</ref>

Citing [[Gallup (company)|Gallup]] polling data from 1976, Kit and Frederica Konolige wrote in their 1978 book ''The Power of Their Glory'', "As befits a church that belongs to the worldwide [[Anglican Communion]], Episcopalianism has the [[United Kingdom]] to thank for the ancestors of fully 49 percent of its members. ... The stereotype of the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) finds its fullest expression in the Episcopal Church."<ref>{{cite book |last=Konolige |first=Kit and Frederica |title=The Power of Their Glory: America's Ruling Class: The Episcopalians |publisher=Wyden Books |location=New York |year=1978 |page=28 |isbn=0-88326-155-3}}</ref>



''WASP'' is also used in Australia and Canada for similar elites.<ref name="Careless297" /><ref name="C.P. Champion 2010 48–49"/><ref name="Fee & McAlpine"/><ref name="Ludowyk"/> WASPs traditionally have been associated with [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal]] (or [[Anglican]]), [[Presbyterian Church (USA)|Presbyterian]], [[United Methodist Church|United Methodist]], [[United Church of Christ|Congregationalist]], and other [[mainline Protestant]] denominations; but the term has expanded to include other Protestant denominations as well.<ref name="Davidson & Pyle">{{cite journal |first1=James D. |last1=Davidson |first2=Ralph E. |last2=Pyle |first3=David V. |last3=Reyes |title=Persistence and Change in the Protestant Establishment, 1930-1992 |journal=[[Social Forces]] |volume=74 |issue=1 |year=1995 |pages=157–175 [p. 164] |doi=10.1093/sf/74.1.157 |jstor=2580627}}</ref>

''WASP'' is also used in Australia and Canada for similar elites.<ref name="Careless297" /><ref name="C.P. Champion 2010 48–49"/><ref name="Fee & McAlpine"/><ref name="Ludowyk"/> WASPs traditionally have been associated with [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal]] (or [[Anglican]]), [[Presbyterian Church in the United States of America|Presbyterian]], [[United Methodist Church|United Methodist]], [[United Church of Christ|Congregationalist]], and other [[mainline Protestant]] denominations; but the term has expanded to include other Protestant denominations as well.<ref name="Davidson & Pyle">{{cite journal |first1=James D. |last1=Davidson |first2=Ralph E. |last2=Pyle |first3=David V. |last3=Reyes |title=Persistence and Change in the Protestant Establishment, 1930-1992 |journal=[[Social Forces]] |volume=74 |issue=1 |year=1995 |pages=157–175 [p. 164] |doi=10.1093/sf/74.1.157 |jstor=2580627}}</ref>



===''Anglo-Saxon'' in modern usage===

===''Anglo-Saxon'' in modern usage===


Revision as of 20:37, 17 May 2022

In the United States, White Anglo-Saxon ProtestantsorWASPs are the white, upper-class, American Protestant elite, typically of British descent.[1] WASP elites have dominated American society, culture, and politics for most of the history of the United States. After 1945, many Americans criticized the WASP hegemony and disparaged them as part of "The Establishment".[2][3] Although the social influence of wealthy WASPs has declined since the 1940s, the group continues to play a central role in American finance, politics and philanthropy.[4]

The root of the term Anglo-Saxon, is in reference to the Northern Germanic tribes who, following the Roman withdrawal in 400, invaded and colonized most of what was Britania, displacing the previous Celtic inhabitants of the island and eventually forming the Kingdom of England. Though, the term is often used to refer to all people of British ancestry, "WASP" is often used more broadly by sociologists and others to include all Protestant Americans of Northern EuropeanorNorthwestern European ancestry.[5][6] WASP is also used for elites in Australia, New Zealand, and Canada.[7][8][9][10] The 1998 Random House Unabridged Dictionary says the term is "sometimes disparaging and offensive".[11]

Naming

The Angles and Saxons were Germanic tribes that migrated to Great Britain near the end of antiquity and the beginning of the Middle Ages. Anglian and Saxon kingdoms were established over most of what is present-day England, and collectively they came to identify themselves as "English", after England ('land of the Angles'), while the indigenous Celtic people were called British. Later, the name Anglo-Saxon was also applied to these people, reflecting their Germanic tribal origins; and, after the Norman conquest in 1066, Anglo-Saxon has been used to refer to the pre-invasion English people. The American Revolution was, in large-part, rooted in a mythical ideology that the American colonists were the descendents of the Anglo-Saxons who had fled to the New World to free themselves from the British Normans.[citation needed] Since the 19th century, Anglo-Saxon has been in common use in the English-speaking world, but not in Britain itself, to refer to Protestants of principally English descent.[12] The W and P were added in the 1950s to form a humorous epithet to imply "waspishness" or someone likely to make sharp, slightly cruel remarks.[2]

Political scientist Andrew Hacker used the term WASP in 1957, with W standing for 'wealthy' rather than 'white'. Describing the class of Americans that held "national power in its economic, political, and social aspects", Hacker wrote:

These 'old' Americans possess, for the most part, some common characteristics. First of all, they are 'WASPs'—in the cocktail party jargon of the sociologists. That is, they are wealthy, they are Anglo-Saxon in origin, and they are Protestants (and disproportionately Episcopalian).[13]

An earlier usage appeared in the African-American newspaper The New York Amsterdam News in 1948, when author Stetson Kennedy wrote:

In America, we find the WASPs (White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) ganging up to take their frustrations out on whatever minority group happens to be handy — whether Negro, Catholic, Jewish, Japanese or whatnot.[14]

The term was later popularized by sociologist and University of Pennsylvania professor E. Digby Baltzell, himself a WASP, in his 1964 book The Protestant Establishment: Aristocracy and Caste in America. Baltzell stressed the closed or caste-like characteristic of the group by arguing that "There is a crisis in American leadership in the middle of the twentieth century that is partly due, I think, to the declining authority of an establishment which is now based on an increasingly castelike White-Anglo Saxon-Protestant (WASP) upper class."[15]

Citing Gallup polling data from 1976, Kit and Frederica Konolige wrote in their 1978 book The Power of Their Glory, "As befits a church that belongs to the worldwide Anglican Communion, Episcopalianism has the United Kingdom to thank for the ancestors of fully 49 percent of its members. ... The stereotype of the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) finds its fullest expression in the Episcopal Church."[16]

WASP is also used in Australia and Canada for similar elites.[7][8][9][10] WASPs traditionally have been associated with Episcopal (orAnglican), Presbyterian, United Methodist, Congregationalist, and other mainline Protestant denominations; but the term has expanded to include other Protestant denominations as well.[17]

Anglo-Saxon in modern usage

The concept of Anglo-Saxonism and especially Anglo-Saxon Protestantism evolved in the late 19th century, especially among American Protestant missionaries eager to transform the world. Historian Richard Kyle says:

Protestantism had not yet split into two mutually hostile camps – the liberals and fundamentalists. Of great importance, evangelical Protestantism still dominated the cultural scene. American values bore the stamp of this Anglo-Saxon Protestant ascendancy. The political, cultural, religious, and intellectual leaders of the nation were largely of a Northern European Protestant stock, and they propagated public morals compatible with their background.[18]

Before WASP came into use in the 1960s, the term Anglo-Saxon served some of the same purposes. Like the newer term WASP, the older term Anglo-Saxon was used derisively by writers hostile to an informal alliance between Britain and the U.S. The negative connotation was especially common among Irish Americans and writers in France. Anglo-Saxon, meaning in effect the whole Anglosphere, remains a term favored by the French, used disapprovingly in contexts such as criticism of the Special Relationship of close diplomatic relations between the U.S. and the UK and complaints about perceived "Anglo-Saxon" cultural or political dominance. In December 1918, after victory in the World War, President Woodrow Wilson told a British official in London: “You must not speak of us who come over here as cousins, still less as brothers; we are neither. Neither must you think of us as Anglo-Saxons, for that term can no longer be rightly applied to the people of the United States....There are only two things which can establish and maintain closer relations between your country and mine: they are community of ideals and of interests."[19] The term remains in use in Ireland as a term for the British or English, and sometimes in Scottish Nationalist discourse. Irish-American humorist Finley Peter Dunne popularized the ridicule of "Anglo-Saxons", even calling President Theodore Roosevelt one. Roosevelt insisted he was Dutch.[20] "To be genuinely Irish is to challenge WASP dominance", argues California politician Tom Hayden.[21] The depiction of the Irish in the films of John Ford was a counterpoint to WASP standards of rectitude. "The procession of rambunctious and feckless Celts through Ford's films, Irish and otherwise, was meant to cock a snoot at WASP or 'lace-curtain Irish' ideas of respectability."[22]

In Australia, AngloorAnglo-Saxon refers to people of English descent, while Anglo-Celtic includes people of Irish, Welsh, and Scottish descent.[23]

In France, Anglo-Saxon refers to the combined impact of Britain and the United States on European affairs. Charles de Gaulle repeatedly sought to "rid France of Anglo-Saxon influence".[24] The term is used with more nuance in discussions by French writers on French decline, especially as an alternative model to which France should aspire, how France should adjust to its two most prominent global competitors, and how it should deal with social and economic modernization.[25]

Outside of Anglophone countries, the term Anglo-Saxon and its translations are used to refer to the Anglophone peoples and societies of Britain, the United States, and countries such as Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. Variations include the German Angelsachsen,[26] French le modèle anglo-saxon,[27] Spanish anglosajón,[28] Dutch Angelsaksisch model [nl] and Italian Paesi anglosassoni [it].

19th-century Anglo-Saxonism

In the nineteenth century, Anglo-Saxons was often used as a synonym for all people of English descent and sometimes more generally, for all the English-speaking peoples of the world. It was often used in implying superiority, much to the annoyance of outsiders. For example, American clergyman Josiah Strong boasted in 1890:

In 1700 this race numbered less than 6,000,000 souls. In 1800, Anglo-Saxons (I use the term somewhat broadly to include all English-speaking peoples) had increased to about 20,500,000, and now, in 1890, they number more than 120,000,000.[29]

In 1893, Strong envisioned a future "new era" of triumphant Anglo-Saxonism:

Is it not reasonable to believe that this race is destined to dispossess many weaker ones, assimilate others, and mould the remainder until... it has Anglo-Saxonized mankind?[30]

Other European ethnicities

A 1969 Time article stated, "purists like to confine Wasps to descendants of the British Isles; less exacting analysts are willing to throw in Scandinavians, Netherlanders and Germans."[31] The popular usage of the term has sometimes expanded to include not just Anglo-Saxon or English-American elites but also to people of other Protestant Northwestern European origin, including Protestant Dutch Americans, Scottish Americans,[4] Welsh Americans,[32] German Americans, and Scandinavian Americans.[6][33] The sociologist Charles H. Anderson writes, "Scandinavians are second-class WASPs" but know it is "better to be a second-class WASP than a non-WASP".[34]

Sociologists William Thompson and Joseph Hickey described a further expansion of the term's meaning:

The term WASP has many meanings. In sociology it reflects that segment of the U.S. population that founded the nation and traced their heritages to...Northwestern Europe. The term...has become more inclusive. To many people, WASP now includes most 'white' people who are not ... members of any minority group.[35][page needed]

Apart from Protestant English, German, Dutch, and Scandinavian Americans, other ethnic groups frequently included under the label WASP include Americans of French Huguenot descent,[33] Scotch-Irish Americans,[36] Scottish Americans,[37] Welsh Americans,[38] Protestant Americans of Germanic Northwestern European descent in general,[39] and established Protestant American families of "vague" or "mixed" Germanic Northwestern European heritage.[40]

Culture

Washington National Cathedral, the Episcopal cathedral in Washington, D.C.

Education

Harvard College was primarily white and Protestant into the 20th century.[41]

Expensive, private prep schools and universities have historically been associated with WASPs. Colleges such as the Ivy League, the Little Ivies, and the Seven Sisters colleges are particularly intertwined with the culture.[42] Until roughly World War II, Ivy League universities were composed largely of white Protestants. While admission to these schools is generally based upon merit, many of these universities give a legacy preference for the children of alumni in order to link elite families (and their wealth) with the school. These legacy admissions allowed for the continuation of WASP influence on important sectors of the US.[43][page needed]

Members of Protestant denominations associated with WASPs have some of the highest proportions of advanced degrees. Examples include the Episcopal Church with 76% of those polled having some college and the Presbyterian Church with 64%.[44][45][46]

According to Scientific Elite: Nobel Laureates in the United StatesbyHarriet Zuckerman, between 1901 and 1972, 72% of American Nobel Prize Laureates have come from a Protestant background, while Protestants made up roughly 67% of the US population during that period.[47] Of Nobel prizes awarded to Americans between 1901 and 1972, 84.2% of those in Chemistry,[47] 60% in Medicine,[47] and 58.6% in Physics[47] were awarded to Protestants.

Politics

From 1854 until about 1964, white Protestants were predominantly Republicans.[15] More recently, the group is split more evenly between the Republican and Democratic parties.[48]

Wealth

Episcopalians and Presbyterians are among the wealthiest religious groups and were formerly disproportionately represented in American business, law, and politics.[13][49][2] Some of the wealthiest and most affluent American families such as the Vanderbilts, Astors, Rockefellers,[50] Du Ponts, Roosevelts, Forbes, Fords,[50] Mellons,[50] Whitneys, and Morgans are white primarily mainline Protestant families.[49]

Location

Beacon Hill, Boston: a preeminent Boston Brahmin neighborhood.[51]

The Boston Brahmins, who were regarded as the nation's social and cultural elites, were often associated with the American upper class, Harvard University;[52] and the Episcopal Church.[53][54]

Like other ethnic groups, WASPs tend to concentrate within close proximity of each other. These areas are often exclusive and associated with top schools, high incomes, well-established church communities, and high real-estate values.[55][failed verification] For example, in the Detroit area, WASPs predominantly possessed the wealth that came from the new automotive industry. After the 1967 Detroit riot, they tended to congregate in the Grosse Pointe suburbs. In Chicagoland, white Protestants primarily reside in the North Shore suburbs, the Barrington area in the northwest suburbs, and in Oak Park and DuPage County in the western suburbs.[56]

Social values

David Brooks, a columnist for The New York Times who attended an Episcopal prep school, writes that WASPs took pride in "good posture, genteel manners, personal hygiene, pointless discipline, the ability to sit still for long periods of time."[57] According to the essayist Joseph Epstein, WASPs developed a style of understated quiet leadership.[58]

A common practice of WASP families is presenting their daughters of marriageable age (traditionally at the age of 17 or 18 years old) at a débutante ball, such as the International Debutante Ball at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City.[59]

Social Register

America's social elite was a small, closed group. The leadership was well-known to the readers of newspaper society pages, but in larger cities it was hard to remember everyone, or to keep track of the new debutantes and marriages.[60] The solution was the Social Register, which listed the names and addresses of about 1 percent of the population. Most were WASPs, and they included families who mingled at the same private clubs, attended the right teas and cotillions, worshipped together at prestige churches, funded the proper charities, lived in exclusive neighborhoods, and sent their daughters to finishing schools[61] and their sons away to prep schools.[62][page needed] In the heyday of WASP dominance, the Social Register delineated high society. According to The New York Times, its influence had faded by the late 20th century:

Once, the Social Register was a juggernaut in New York social circles... Nowadays, however, with the waning of the WASP elite as a social and political force, the register's role as an arbiter of who counts and who doesn't is almost an anachronism. In Manhattan, where charity galas are at the center of the social season, the organizing committees are studded with luminaries from publishing, Hollywood and Wall Street and family lineage is almost irrelevant.[63]

Fashion

In 2007, The New York Times reported that there was a rising interest in the WASP culture.[64] In their review of Susanna Salk's A Privileged Life: Celebrating WASP Style, they stated that Salk "is serious about defending the virtues of WASP values, and their contribution to American culture."[64]

By the 1980s, brands such as Lacoste and Ralph Lauren and their logos became associated with the preppy fashion style which was associated with WASP culture.[65]

Social and political influence

View of Manhattan's Upper East Side, which has traditionally been dominated by WASP families.[66][67]

The term WASP became associated with an upper class in the United States due to over-representation of WASPs in the upper echelons of society. Until the mid–20th century, industries such as banks, insurance, railroads, utilities, and manufacturing were dominated by WASPs.[68]

The Founding Fathers of the United States were mostly educated, well-to-do, of British ancestry, and Protestants. According to a study of the biographies of signers of the Declaration of Independence by Caroline Robbins:

The Signers came for the most part from an educated elite, were residents of older settlements, and belonged with a few exceptions to a moderately well-to-do class representing only a fraction of the population. Native or born overseas, they were of British stock and of the Protestant faith.[69][70]

Catholics in the Northeast and the Midwest—mostly immigrants and their descendants from Ireland and Germany as well as southern and eastern Europe—came to dominate Democratic Party politics in big cities through the ward boss system. Catholic politicians were often the target of WASP political hostility.[31]

Political scientist Eric Kaufmann argues that "the 1920s marked the high tide of WASP control".[71] In 1965 Canadian sociologist John Porter, in The Vertical Mosaic, argued that British origins were disproportionately represented in the higher echelons of Canadian class, income, political power, the clergy, the media, etc. However, more recently Canadian scholars have traced the decline of the WASP elite.[8]

Post–World War II

According to Ralph E. Pyle:

A number of analysts have suggested that WASP dominance of the institutional order has become a thing of the past. The accepted wisdom is that after World War II, the selection of individuals for leadership positions was increasingly based on factors such as motivation and training rather than ethnicity and social lineage.[68]

Many reasons have been given for the decline of WASP power, and books have been written detailing it.[72] Self-imposed diversity incentives opened the country's most elite schools.[73] The GI Bill brought higher education to new ethnic arrivals, who found middle class jobs in the postwar economic expansion. Nevertheless, white Protestants remain influential in the country's cultural, political, and economic elite. Scholars typically agree that the group's influence has waned since 1945, with the growing influence of other ethnic groups.[4]

After 1945, Catholics and Jews made strong inroads in getting jobs in the federal civil service, which was once dominated by those from Protestant backgrounds, especially the Department of State. Georgetown University, a Catholic school, made a systematic effort to place graduates in diplomatic career tracks. By the 1990s there were "roughly the same proportion of WASPs, Catholics, and Jews at the elite levels of the federal civil service, and a greater proportion of Jewish and Catholic elites among corporate lawyers."[74] The political scientist Theodore P. Wright, Jr., argues that while the Anglo ethnicity of the U.S. presidents from Richard Nixon through George W. Bush is evidence for the continued cultural dominance of WASPs, assimilation and social mobility, along with the ambiguity of the term, has led the WASP class to survive only by "incorporating other groups [so] that it is no longer the same group" that existed in the mid-20th century.[37]

Two famous confrontations signifying a decline in WASP dominance were the 1952 Senate election in Massachusetts where John F. Kennedy, a Catholic of Irish descent, defeated WASP Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.,[75] and the 1964 challenge by Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater—an Episcopalian[76] who had solid WASP credentials through his mother but whose father was Jewish and was seen by some as part of the Jewish community[77]—to Nelson Rockefeller and the Eastern Republican establishment,[78] which led to the liberal Rockefeller Republican wing of the party being marginalized by the 1980s, overwhelmed by the dominance of Southern and Western conservatives.[79] However, asking "Is the WASP leader a dying breed?", journalist Nina Strochlic in 2012 pointed to eleven WASP top politicians ending with Republicans G.H.W. Bush, elected in 1988, his son George W. Bush, elected in 2000 and 2004, and John McCain, who was nominated but defeated in 2008.[80] Mary Kenny argues that Barack Obama, although famous as the first Black president, exemplifies highly controlled "unemotional delivery" and "rational detachment" characteristic of WASP personality traits. Indeed he attended upper class schools such as Harvard and was raised by his WASP mother Ann Dunham and the Dunham grandparents in a family that dates to Jonathan Singletary Dunham born in Massachusetts in 1640.[81][82][83] Inderjeet Parmar and Mark Ledwidge argue that Obama pursued a typically WASP-inspired foreign policy of liberal internationalism. [84]

In the 1970s, a Fortune magazine study found one-in-five of the country's largest businesses and one-in-three of its largest banks was run by an Episcopalian.[49] More recent studies indicate a still-disproportionate, though somewhat reduced, influence of WASPs among economic elites.[68]

The reversal of WASP fortune was exemplified by the Supreme Court. Historically almost all its justices were of WASP or Protestant Germanic heritage. The exceptions included seven Catholics and two Jews.[85] Since the 1960s, an increasing number of non-WASP justices have been appointed to the Court.[86][87] From 2010 to 2017, the Court had no Protestant members, until the appointment of Neil Gorsuch in 2017.[88]

The University of California, Berkeley, once a WASP stronghold, has changed radically: only 30% of its undergraduates in 2007 were of European origin (including WASPs and all other Europeans), and 63% of undergraduates at the University were from immigrant families (where at least one parent was an immigrant), especially Asian.[89]

A significant shift of American economic activity toward the Sun Belt during the latter part of the 20th century and an increasingly globalized economy have also contributed to the decline in power held by Northeastern WASPs. James D. Davidson et al. argued in 1995 that while WASPs were no longer solitary among the American elite, members of the Patrician class remained markedly prevalent within the current power structure.[17]

Other analysts have argued that the extent of the decrease in WASP dominance has been overstated. In response to increasing claims of fading WASP dominance, Davidson, using data on American elites in political and economic spheres, concluded in 1994 that, while the WASP and Protestant establishment had lost some of its earlier prominence, WASPs and Protestants were still vastly overrepresented among America's elite.[37][90]

Hostile epithet

Sociologist John W. Dykstra in 1958 described the "white AngloSaxon Protestant" as "Mr. Bigot."[91] Historian Martin Marty said in 1991 that WASPs “are the one ethnoreligioracial group that all can demean with impunity.” [92]

In the 21st century, WASP is often applied as a derogatory label to those with social privilege who are perceived to be snobbish and exclusive, such as being members of restrictive private social clubs.[68] Kevin M. Schultz stated in 2010 that WASP is "a much-maligned class identity....Today, it signifies an elitist snoot."[93] A number of popular jokes ridicule those thought to fit the stereotype.[94]

Occasionally, a writer praises the WASP contribution, as conservative historian Richard Brookhiser did in 1991 when he said the "uptight, bland, and elitist" stereotype obscures the "classic WASP ideals of industry, public service, family duty, and conscience to revitalize the nation."[95] Likewise conservative writer Joseph Epstein praised WASP history in 2013 and asked, "Are we really better off with a country run by the self-involved, over-schooled products of modern meritocracy?" He deplores how the WASP element lost its self-confidence and came under attack as "The Establishment."[96]

In media

American films, including Annie Hall and Meet the Parents, have used the conflicts between WASP families and urban Jewish families for comedic effect.[97]

The 1939 Broadway play Arsenic and Old Lace, later adapted into a Hollywood film released in 1944, ridiculed the old American elite. The play and film depict "old-stock British Americans" a decade before they were tagged as WASPS.[98]

The playwright A. R. Gurney (1930-2017), himself of WASP heritage, has written a series of plays that have been called "penetratingly witty studies of the WASP ascendancy in retreat".[99] Gurney told the Washington Post in 1982:

WASPs do have a culture – traditions, idiosyncrasies, quirks, particular signals and totems we pass on to one another. But the WASP culture, or at least that aspect of the culture I talk about, is enough in the past so that we can now look at it with some objectivity, smile at it, and even appreciate some of its values. There was a closeness of family, a commitment to duty, to stoic responsibility, which I think we have to say weren't entirely bad.[100]

In Gurney's play The Cocktail Hour (1988), a lead character tells her playwright son that theater critics "don't like us... They resent us. They think we're all Republicans, all superficial and all alcoholics. Only the latter is true."[99]

Filmmaker Whit Stillman, whose godfather was E. Digby Baltzell, has made films dealing primarily with WASP characters and subjects. Stillman has been called the "WASP Woody Allen."[101] His debut 1990 film Metropolitan tells the story of a group of college-age Manhattan socialites during débutante season. A recurring theme of the film is the declining power of the old Protestant élite.[102]

See also

  • American gentry
  • American upper class
  • Anglo-Celtic Australians
  • Anglosphere
  • Boston Brahmins
  • British Americans
  • Daughters of the American Revolution
  • Dominant minority
  • Donor Class
  • The Establishment
  • First Families of Virginia
  • High society (social class)
  • International Debutante Ball
  • Old money
  • Old Philadelphians
  • Old Stock Americans
  • Preppy
  • Social class in the United States
  • Social register
  • Transatlantic accent
  • Union League
  • Wealth in the United States
  • White-shoe firm
  • Yankee
  • References

    1. ^ Zhang, Mobei (2015). "WASPs". In Stone, John; et al. (eds.). The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Nationalism. Abstract. doi:10.1002/9781118663202.wberen692. ISBN 978-1-118-66320-2.
  • ^ a b c Allen, Irving Lewis (1975). "WASP—From Sociological Concept to Epithet". Ethnicity. 2 (2): 153–162. ISSN 0095-6139.
  • ^ By the 1950s, the emerging New Left was "thumbing their noses at the stuffy white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant establishment." W. J. Rorabaugh, "Challenging Authority, Seeking Community, and Empowerment in the New Left, Black Power, and Feminism," Journal of Policy History (Jan 1996) vol 8 p. 110.
  • ^ a b c Kaufmann, Eric P. (2004). "The decline of the WASP in the United States and Canada". In Kaufmann, E.P. (ed.). Rethinking Ethnicity: Majority Groups and Dominant Minorities. London, New York: Routledge. pp. 61–83. ISBN 0-41-531542-5.
  • ^ Wilton, David (2020). "What Do We Mean By Anglo-Saxon? Pre-Conquest to the Present". The Journal of English and Germanic Philology. 119 (4): 425–454. doi:10.5406/jenglgermphil.119.4.0425. ISSN 0363-6941.
  • ^ a b Glassman, Ronald; Swatos, William H., Jr.; Denison, Barbara J. (2004). Social Problems in Global Perspective. University Press of America. p. 258. ISBN 9780761829331.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  • ^ "wasp". www.dictionary.com. Archived from the original on October 20, 2018.
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  • ^ a b Baltzell (1964). The Protestant Establishment. New York, Random House. p. 9.
  • ^ Konolige, Kit and Frederica (1978). The Power of Their Glory: America's Ruling Class: The Episcopalians. New York: Wyden Books. p. 28. ISBN 0-88326-155-3.
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  • ^ See "Concepto de anglosajón" Archived 25 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
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  • ^ a b c W. Williams, Peter (2016). Religion, Art, and Money: Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression. University of North Carolina Press. p. 176. ISBN 9781469626987. The names of fashionable families who were already Episcopalian, like the Morgans, or those, like the Fricks, who now became so, goes on interminably: Aldrich, Astor, Biddle, Booth, Brown, Du Pont, Firestone, Ford, Gardner, Mellon, Morgan, Procter, the Vanderbilt, Whitney. Episcopalians branches of the Baptist Rockefellers and Jewish Guggenheims even appeared on these family trees.
  • ^ Cople Jaher, Frederic (1982). The Urban Establishment: Upper Strata in Boston, New York, Charleston, Chicago, and Los Angeles. University of Illinois Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780252009327.
  • ^ B. Rosenbaum, Julia (2006). Visions of Belonging: New England Art and the Making of American Identity. Cornell University Press. p. 45. ISBN 9780801444708. By the late nineteenth century, one of the strongest bulwarks of Brahmin power was Harvard University. Statistics underscore the close relationship between Harvard and Boston's upper strata.
  • ^ C. Holloran, Peter (1989). Boston's Wayward Children: Social Services for Homeless Children, 1830-1930. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 73. ISBN 9780838632970.
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  • ^ Dillaway, Diana (2009). Power Failure: Politics, Patronage, And the Economic Future of Buffalo, New York. Prometheus. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-1-61592-237-6.
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  • ^ Pressly, Paul M. (1996). "Educating the Daughters of Savannah's Elite: The Pape School, the Girl Scouts, and the Progressive Movement" (PDF). Georgia Historical Quarterly. 80 (2): 246–275. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 3, 2016.
  • ^ Peter W. Cookson, Jr.; Caroline Persell (1985). Preparing for power. Basic Books. ISBN 0-465-06269-5. OCLC 12680970. OL 18166618W. Wikidata Q108671720.
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  • ^ Auzias, Dominique; Labourdette, Jean-Paul (2015). New York 2015 Petit Futé (avec cartes, photos + avis des lecteurs) (in French). p. 133. ISBN 978-2-7469-8244-4.
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  • ^ Robbins, Caroline (1977). "Decision in '76: Reflections on the 56 Signers". Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 89: 72–87. JSTOR 25080810.
  • ^ Brown, Richard D. (1976). "The Founding Fathers of 1776 and 1787: A collective view". William and Mary Quarterly. 33 (3): 465–480. doi:10.2307/1921543. JSTOR 1921543.
  • ^ Kaufmann (2004), p. 66.
  • ^ See Lehmann-Haupt, Christopher (January 17, 1991). "The Decline of a Class and a Country's Fortunes". The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 16, 2008.
  • ^ Zweigenhaft, Richard L.; Domhoff, G. William (2006). Diversity in the power elite: how it happened, why it matters. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 242–3. ISBN 0-7425-3698-X.
  • ^ Kaufmann (2004), p. 220 citing Lerner et al. (1996) American Elites.
  • ^ Gronnerud, Kathleen A.; Spitzer, Scott J. (2018). Modern American Political Dynasties: A Study of Power, Family, and Political Influence. ABC-CLIO. pp. 37–38. ISBN 978-1-4408-5443-9.
  • ^ Barnes, Bart (May 30, 1998). "Barry Goldwater Dead at 89". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on August 3, 2018.
  • ^ "The Goldwaters: An Arizona Story And a Jewish History As Well". Southwest Jewish History. 1 (3). Spring 1993. OCLC 32992705. Archived from the original on August 19, 2018 – via Southwest Jewish Archives, University of Arizona.
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  • ^ Strochlic, Nina (August 16, 2012). "George Washington to George W. Bush: 11 WASPs Who Have Led America (PHOTOS)". The Daily Beast.
  • ^ Mary Kenny, "Obama shaped more by his WASP heritage than the passion of Martin Luther King," Independent.ie (September 7, 2014)
  • ^ Charles M Marsteller & William Addams Reitwiesner & Linda Davis Reno & Mike Marshall (2015). St. Mary's Co, MD: ancestry of President Barak Obama (b. 1961). San Francisco, CA: William Addams Reitwiesner. OCLC 921887130.
  • ^ Janny Scott, A singular woman: the untold story of Barack Obama's mother (2011) p. 148. online
  • ^ Inderjeet Parmar and Mark Ledwidge, 『...‘a foundation-hatched black’: Obama, the US establishment, and foreign policy.』International Politics 54.3 (2017): 373-388 online.
  • ^ Schmidhauser, John Richard (1979). Judges and justices: the Federal Appellate Judiciary. Little, Brown and Company. p. 60. OCLC 654145492.
  • ^ "Religious Affiliation of the U.S. Supreme Court". Adherents.com. 2006. Archived from the original on January 7, 2007. Retrieved June 14, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • ^ Paulson, Michael (May 26, 2009). "Catholicism: Sotomayor would be sixth Catholic". Boston Globe.
  • ^ Frank, Robert (May 15, 2010). "That Bright, Dying Star, the American WASP". The Wall Street Journal.
  • ^ Douglass, John Aubrey; Roebken, Heinke; Thomson, Gregg (November 2007). "The Immigrant University: Assessing the Dynamics of Race, Major and Socioeconomic Characteristics at the University of California". Center for Studies in Higher Education; University of California, Berkeley. Archived from the original on July 19, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • ^ Davidson, James D. (December 1994). "Religion Among America's Elite: Persistence and Change in the Protestant Establishment". Sociology of Religion. 55 (4): 419–440. doi:10.2307/3711980. JSTOR 3711980.
  • ^ John W. Dykstra, "The PhD Fetish," School and Society 86.2133 (1958): 237-239, cited in Schultz (2010).
  • ^ Martin E. Marty, "Review", ‘’The Christian Century’’, 108#6 (Feb 20, 1991) p. 204.
  • ^ Schultz, Kevin M. (2010). "The Waspish Hetero-Patriarchy: Locating Power in Recent American History". Historically Speaking. 11 (5): 8–11. ISSN 1944-6438 – via Project MUSE.
  • ^ Martin, Holly E. (2011). Writing Between Cultures: A Study of Hybrid Narratives in Ethnic Literature of the United States. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. p. 117 (footnote). ISBN 978-0-78-646660-3.
  • ^ Brookhiser, Richard (1991). The Way of the WASP: How It Made America and How It Can Save It, So to Speak. New York, N.Y.: Free Press.
  • ^ Epstein, Joseph (December 23, 2013). "The Late, Great American WASP". The Wall Street Journal.
  • ^ Wilmington, Michael (November 6, 2000). "'Meet the Parents' Finds Success by Marrying Classic Themes to Modern Tastes". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on September 25, 2015.
  • ^ Furman, Robert (2015). Brooklyn Heights: The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of America's First Suburb. Charleston, S.C.: History Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-62-619954-5.
  • ^ a b Teachout, Terry (January 7, 2016). "'The Cocktail Hour' Review: Anatomy of a WASP". The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on December 24, 2017.
  • ^ Quoted in Schudel, Matt (June 15, 2017). "A.R. Gurney, playwright who portrayed the fading WASP culture, dies at 86". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on July 13, 2018.
  • ^ Kilian, Michael (June 7, 1998). "'THE WASP WOODY ALLEN'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 22, 2021.
  • ^ Taylor, Trey (August 30, 2020). "Whit Stillman's 'Metropolitan': An Oral History of the Preppiest, WASPiest, Wittiest Comedy of Heirs Ever". Town & Country. Retrieved January 22, 2021.
  • Further reading

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