America through Foreign Eyes, ed. Richard D. Lambert (Sept. 1954).
2.
2. For an eloquent critique of American failure to understand Asian nationalism, see Selig S. Harrison, The Widening Gulf: Asian Nationalism and American Policy (New York: Free Press, 1978).
3.
3. To be sure, that slant was inherent in the way the volume was structured; it was, however, typical of its time.
4.
4. Stephan Haseler makes this point with considerable passion in his Varieties of Anti-Americanism: Reflex and Response (Washington, DC: Ethics and Public Policy Center, 1985).
5.
5. Haseler makes this point well in The Varieties of Anti-Americanism. He adds that it is also not anti-Americanism when nations oppose particular American policies or administrations, when they change their attitudes based upon reassessments of the direction in which power is moving, or when they forcefully assert their right to self-determination and independence.
6.
6. The Washington Post carried on 15 Nov. 1987 an interesting article by Graham Fuller in which he summarized and in part translated an article by one Leonid Pochivalov bemoaning the shortcomings of his Soviet countrymen when they travel abroad and the anti-Sovietism they evoke.
7.
7. Alvin Rubinstein and Donald Smith, eds., Anti-Americanism in the Third World: Implications for U.S. Foreign Policy (New York: Praeger, 1985).