About This Book
A satirical Socratic dialogue set in the 1920s uses classical interlocutors to report impressions of the United States, moving from observations of gender roles, clubs, and social manners to examinations of federalism, public opinion, prohibition, and education. Through conversational episodes and comedic lectures by visiting figures, it contrasts American habits with European attitudes, probes the expansion of federal power, debates temperance and schooling, and reflects on Anglo-American relations. The work blends travelogue, political analysis, and social satire to critique modern customs from a philosophical perspective.
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