
New Books Network 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 University and creator of the Italian Innovators channel, explores Italy’s entangled relationship with the United States around 1888–1919. He traces debates on emigration, Columbian symbolism, American tourists and products in Italy, and Woodrow Wilson’s cultural and political influence during and after World War I.
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Americanism As A Two-Way Debate
- 'Americanism' in the late 19th century was a contested, multi-faceted debate about identity and influence.
- Luca Cottini frames Americanism as both how Americans exported values and how Italians imagined the U.S. through migration and exchanges.
1888 Law Sparked The Great Immigration
- The 1888 Italian law legalized and tracked emigration, unintentionally legitimizing long-term migration.
- Cottini links that law to the start of Italy's 'great immigration' and to the returnees who exported American practices back home.
1891 New Orleans Lynching And Fallout
- In 1891 a mob lynched 13 Italians in New Orleans, fueling a diplomatic rupture with Italy.
- The crisis led Italy to open an embassy in Washington and the Vatican to send priests to protect migrants.

