Reconstruction and Empire
ByPublisher Description
This volume examines the historical connections between the United States’ Reconstruction and the country’s emergence as a geopolitical power a few decades later. It shows how the processes at work during the postbellum decade variously foreshadowed, inhibited, and conditioned the development of the United States as an overseas empire and regional hegemon. In doing so, it links the diverse topics of abolition, diplomacy, Jim Crow, humanitarianism, and imperialism.
In 1935, the great African American intellectual W. E. B. Du Bois argued in his Black Reconstruction in America that these two historical moments were intimately related. In particular, Du Bois averred that the nation’s betrayal of the South’s fledgling interracial democracy in the 1870s put reactionaries in charge of a country on the verge of global power, with world-historical implications. Working with the same chronological and geographical parameters, the contributors here take up targeted case studies, tracing the biographical, ideological, and thematic linkages that stretch across the postbellum and imperial moments. With an Introduction, eleven chapters, and an Afterword, this volume offers multiple perspectives based on original primary source research. The resulting composite picture points to a host of countervailing continuities and changes. The contributors examine topics as diverse as diplomatic relations with Spain, the changing views of radical abolitionists, African American missionaries in the Caribbean, and the ambiguities of turn-of-the century political cartoons.
Collectively, the volume unsettles familiar assumptions about how we should understand the late nineteenth-century United States, conventionally framed as the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. It also advances transnational approaches to understanding America’s Reconstruction and the search for the ideological currents shaping American power abroad.
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About David Prior
Other books by David Prior
Adrian Brettle
Adrian Brettle is a lecturer and the associate director of the Political History and Leadership Program in the School of Historical, Philosophical, and Religious Studies at Arizona
State University. He is the author of Colossal Ambitions: Confederate Planning for a Post–
Civil War World (University of Virginia Press, 2020) and essays in Civil War History and
the Journal of Policy History.
Other books by Adrian Brettle
Christina C. Davidson
Rebecca Edwards
Other books by Rebecca Edwards
Mark Elliott
Other books by Mark Elliott
Andre Fleche
Andre M. Fleche is a professor of history at Castleton University and the author of The
Revolution of 1861: The American Civil War in the Age of Nationalist Conflict (University
of North Carolina Press, 2012). His writings have appeared in Civil War History, the Journal
of the Civil War Era, and A Companion to U.S. Foreign Relations: Colonial Era to the
Present.
Gregg French
Lawrence B. Glickman
Other books by Lawrence B. Glickman
Reilly Ben Hatch
Reilly Ben Hatch is a PhD candidate in history and Russell J. and Dorothy S. Bilinski Fellow
at the University of New Mexico, where his dissertation uses the Posey Wars of 1915
and 1923 to examine the relationships between Mormons and Indigenous communities
in the context of federal assimilation eff orts. He teaches history at Davis High School
in Kaysville, Utah. He has published essays in the Journal of the Southwest and the New
Mexico Historical Review.
David V. Holtby
Justin F. Jackson
Other books by Justin F. Jackson
DJ Polite
David Prior
Other books by David Prior
Brian Shott
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