
New Books in Intellectual History Luca Cottini, "The Rise of Americanism in Italy, 1888-1919" (U Toronto Press, 2025)
Feb 2, 2026
Luca Cottini, associate professor of Italian studies at Villanova and creator of the Italian Innovators channel, explores how Italy absorbed and contested American influence around 1900. He traces migration, Columbus-themed national narratives, American visitors and products reshaping Italian life, and Woodrow Wilson’s soft power during World War I. Short, vivid stories reveal a two-way transatlantic exchange and the rise of an Italian Americanism.
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Americanism Is A Two-Way Construction
- 'Americanism' is a multivalent concept shaped by both U.S. self-definition and foreign perceptions during mass migration.
- Luca Cottini shows Italian and American actors co-construct the idea through migration, commerce, and cultural exchange.
The 1888 Law Catalyzed Mass Emigration
- The 1888 Italian law legalized and tracked seasonal migration but unintentionally legitimized long-term emigration.
- Cottini argues this law catalyzed the 'great immigration' and returned emigrants shaped Italian Americanism.
New Orleans Lynching Sparked Diplomatic Crisis
- Cottini recounts the 1891 New Orleans lynching of 13 Italians, mostly Sicilians, which ruptured U.S.-Italy ties.
- The episode led to Italy opening an embassy in Washington and diplomatic protections for migrants.

