
New Books in American Studies 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 YouTube channel. He explores how Italian migration, American tourists and products, and Wilsonian soft power shaped Italian views of the United States. Short scenes cover Columbus reimagining, cultural exchanges with artists and entrepreneurs, and the postwar backlash that fed nationalist currents.
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Episode notes
Americanism As Two-Way Exchange
- Americanism is a multivalent idea shaped by both U.S. export ideology and Italian perceptions during mass migration.
- Luca Cottini argues transatlantic exchange made Americanism a two-way construction, not a one-directional export.
1888 Law Fueled The Great Emigration
- The 1888 Italian law legalized and tracked seasonal migration but unintentionally legitimized permanent emigration.
- Cottini highlights returnees who brought American practices back to Italy and influenced local culture.
New Orleans Lynching Shook Diplomacy
- The 1891 New Orleans lynching of 11 Sicilians and two others disrupted U.S.-Italy relations and nearly provoked war.
- That crisis led Italy to open its embassy in Washington and seek protections for emigrants.

