A Companion to U. S. Foreign Relations : Colonial Era to the Present.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781119459408
- 327.73
- E183.7 .C667 2020
Cover -- Volume1 -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- About the Editor -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter One Imperial Crisis, Revolution, and a New Nation, 1763-1803 -- The Imperial Crisis (1763-1775) -- Revolution and War (1775-1783) -- Postwar Struggles under the Articles of Confederation (1783-1788) -- The Evolution of National Policy Under the Presidencies of Washington, Adams, and Jefferson (1789-1803) -- Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Two The Early Republic in a World of Empire, 1787-1848 -- Empire by Another Name? -- A Postcolonial Empire? -- Expansion as Settler Colonialism -- Colonization and Empire -- Missionaries and Empire -- Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Three Time, Talent, and Treasure: Philanthropy in the Early Republic -- The Boundaries of Philanthropic Historiography -- Conceptions of Philanthropy in the Early Republic -- The Origins of Distant Caring -- How was Philanthropy Raced and Gendered? -- Where Next? -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Four The Articles of Confederation State System, Early American International Systems, and Antebellum Foreign Policy Analytical Frameworks -- "General" Political Interpretive Histories of the Confederation and the "Critical‐Period" Debate -- "Traditional" Foreign Policy History Accounts of the Early Republic -- Atlantic History, Borderland, and Global Analytical Constructs and Early American Foreign Affairs -- The International State System Analytical Approach to Antebellum Foreign Relations -- The American Confederation State System, 1781-1789 -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Five Natural Rights: Haitian-American Diplomacy in the Age of Atlantic Revolutions -- Race and Diplomacy in the American Revolution -- Revolution and Counterrevolution in Saint-Domingue.
The Revolutionary Diplomacy of John Adams -- Counterrevolutionary Diplomacy in the Nineteenth Century -- The Slavocracy and Its Foreign Policies -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Six Toward a "New Indian History" of Foreign Relations: U.S.-American Indian Diplomacy from Greenville to Wounded Knee, 1795-1890 -- U.S. Indian Policy as Imperial Policy -- The Lessons of Native American and Borderlands History -- Diplomacy in an Imperial Context -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Seven Many Manifest Destinies -- New Directions -- New Histories in Practice -- Settler Colonialism -- Extraterritorial Expansion -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter Eight New Research Avenues in the Foreign Relations of the Late Antebellum and Civil War Era -- A Republic of Commerce -- From Commerce to Migration -- A Contest for American Empire -- Exploring the Diplomacy of War -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Nine Ideology and Interest: The Civil War, U.S. Foreign Affairs, and the World -- Great Britain, Wartime Diplomacy, and the Traditional School -- Revisionism and Its Critics -- The International Politics of the American Civil War -- The Transnational Turn -- Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Ten The United States: Imperium in Imperio in an Age of Imperialism, 1865-1886 -- The Aftermath of an Internationalized Civil War -- References -- Chapter Eleven New Frontiers beyond the Seas: The Culture of American Empire and Expansion at the Turn of the Twentieth Century -- The Historiography of U.S. Foreign Relations -- The Origins of the Cultural Turn -- Culture Ascendant -- New Directions -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Twelve Connection and Disruption: American Industrialization and the World, 1865-1917.
American Industrialization, Looking Outward -- The Transformation of Trade -- Energy and National Security -- International Infrastructure: When Impossibilities No Longer Stood in the Way -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter Thirteen The Open Door Empire -- The Open Door with a Beard: Agrarian Statecraft versus Industrial Statecraft -- The Wisconsin School's Reframing: Bipartisan Consensus -- The Open Door and the Cold War -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Fourteen Theodore Roosevelt's Statecraft and the American Rise to World Power -- The Politics of Power -- Roosevelt Revisionism -- Civilization, Race and Empire -- Roosevelt as a Foreign Policy President -- Internationalism and World Order -- References -- Chapter Fifteen Wilson's Wartime Diplomacy: The United States and the First World War, 1914-1918 -- The Neutrality Period -- The Decision for War -- Wartime Diplomacy, 1917-1918 -- Going Forward -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Sixteen Responding to a Revolution: The "Mexican Question" in the United States -- Mexicanist Interpretations -- The Politics of Diplomacy and History -- Economic Interpretations -- Social and Cultural Interpretations, and New Directions -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Seventeen Chrysalis of Power: U.S. Foreign Policy and the Retreat from Isolationism, 1919-1941 -- The Limits of Wilsonian Diplomacy -- Limited Participation: Power and Diplomacy in the 1920s -- Retreat to Isolationism -- FDR and the Constraints of Isolationism -- War and the End of Isolationism -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Eighteen Insulation: The Presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt During the Years 1933-1941 -- Historiographic Survey -- Insulating America: U.S. Foreign Relations, 1933-1941 -- Future Agendas -- References -- Further Reading.
Chapter Nineteen The United States and International Law, 1776-1939 -- The Law of Nations and the Early Republic -- International Law and Expansion -- Arbitration and Peace -- Law, Civilization, and Empire -- International Law and World Order, 1914-1939 -- Note -- References -- Chapter Twenty U.S. Foreign Relations During World War II -- Franklin Roosevelt's War: Studies of Diplomacy and Military Strategy -- Controversies, Themes, and New International Approaches -- The War at Home: Ideas, Culture, and Memory -- Histories of the War in the Future: Some Concluding Thoughts -- Note -- References -- Chapter Twenty-One Rival and Parallel Missions: America and Soviet Russia, 1917-1945 -- Revolutions and Interventions, 1917-1920 -- Nonrecognition, Aid, and Trade, 1921-1933 -- Recognition and Strained Relations, 1933-1941 -- Wartime Cooperation -- Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Twenty-Two The United States, Transnationalism, and the Jewish Question, 1917-1948 -- Wilson and the Jews -- Zionism in the United States from Wilson to FDR: An Overview -- Hoover and the Jews -- FDR and the Jews -- Truman and the Jews -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Twenty-Three Migrants and Transnational Networks in Sino-American Relations in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries -- Gold Mountain, 1850-1882 -- The Age of Exclusion, 1882-1943 -- Cold Warriors, 1943-1965 -- The Model Minority, 1965-Present -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Twenty-Four The Burden of Empire: The United States in the Philippines, 1898-1965 -- 1898, National Exceptionalism, and U.S. Imperial Culture -- Sovereignty, War, and a Colonial Archive -- State- and Nation-Building -- Transnational and Global Imperial Terrains -- Conclusion -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Twenty-Five A History of U.S. International Policing.
The First Century of Policing -- The Global Expansion of U.S. Policing -- The Rise of Federal Agencies, 1908-1945 -- The Americanization of International Policing -- International Policing in the Twenty-First Century -- Directions for Future Research -- Note -- References -- Volume2 -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- About the Editor -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter Twenty-Six Black Internationalism from Berlin to Black Lives Matter -- Racial Capitalism and Black Internationalism -- The Age of Imperialism and Jim Crow -- New Negroes -- Cold War, Civil Rights, and Black Power -- Black Lives Matter -- Notes -- References -- Chapter Twenty-Seven Drugs, Empire, and U.S. Foreign Policy -- Colonialism and the Global Drug Trade -- The Shift toward Drug Control -- The Cold War and its Hot Legacies -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter Twenty-Eight Military Occupations and Overseas Bases in Twentieth-Century U.S. Foreign Relations -- Occupations and Overseas Military Outposts before World War II -- World War II -- Postwar Occupations and the Military-Base Empire -- Conclusion -- References -- Chapter Twenty-Nine Remaking the World: The United States and International Development, 1898-2015 -- Development and Imperial Continuity -- Development and Modernization Theory -- Development as Democracy Short-Changed -- International Development as Liberal Reform Boomerang -- Development as Misguided Technopolitics -- Development in Crisis and the Neoliberal Turn -- Conclusion -- Note -- References -- Further Reading -- Chapter Thirty The Early Cold War: Studies of Cold War America in the Twenty-First Century -- Earlier "Cultural Turn" Scholarship -- The "Religious Turn" in the Twenty-First Century -- Reexamining Childhood, Gender, and Sexuality -- Race and Ethnicity in Cold War America.
Reexamining Race and Ethnicity in Cold War America.
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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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