Critical Review of Jeremy Rifkin's “The European Dream”

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As someone who has an intense curiosity about Europe, I am very interested with the different culture between North America and Europe. Even though North America has a common heritage with European ties, we have different cultures that have led to unique experiences that give us differing worldviews. All over the world, people are familiar with the idea of “The American Dream”; this phrase shows that America was seen as “a beacon of hope”1, globally and in America. However, according to Jeremy Rifkin, “the American Spirit is tiring and languishing in the past”2 and is being replaced by “The European Dream”.
Rifkin describes the European Dream as “a beacon of light in a troubled world. It beckons us to a new age of inclusivity, diversity, quality of life, deep play, sustainability, universal human rights, the rights of nature, and peace on earth.”3 Emphasizing community, quality of life, and global cooperation, the European Dream “is worth living for”4.
Rifkin says that Americans live to work, stating his belief that many Americans associate security and autonomy with freedom: “The American Dream is largely caught up in the death instinct. We seek autonomy at all cost. We over-consume, indulge our every appetite, and waste the Earth's largesse. We put a premium on unrestrained economic growth, reward the powerful and marginalize the vulnerable... We consider ourselves a chosen people and, therefore, entitled to more than our fair share of the Earth's bounty. Sadly, our self-interest is metamorphosing into pure selfishness. We have become a death culture.”5
In America, the more money you possess, the more secure you feel. However, it is said that Europeans work to live, and that they associate their freedom with “embeddedness [w...

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...American Dream as odd, even a little scary”18. I hate this idea. It shows that Americans think themselves better than the rest of the world, or that they are supposed to be some kind of Eden where everything is handed to them. This part made me so frustrated that America would just raise themselves above the world, and ignore the history of the Jewish 'chosen people' of God, thinking that they as Americans are better and deserve more. This sub-chapter shows America vs the other (aka the world), even more than the comparison of America to Europe that the book is based on. It is so weird reading this book as a Canadian, because I feel as if we are a mixture between Europe and America, which is really off-putting.

Works Cited

Rifkin, Jeremy. The European Dream: How Europe's Vision of The Future is Quietly Eclipsing The American Dream. New York: Tarcher/Penguin, 2004.

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