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The United States and Imperialism

ISBN: 978-1-577-18056-2

February 2001

Wiley-Blackwell

320 pages

Description
The United States and Imperialism uses concepts of civilization, identity, the civilizing mission, and cooperation to explain the role of imperialism throughout American history. Ninkovich's original analysis of America as an empire shows how imperialism, anti-imperialism, and geopolitics have all played a role in how the United States made decisions when seeking new territories.
About the Author
Frank Ninkovich is Professor of History at St John's University. He is the author of several books on United States foreign policy, including The Wilsonian Century (1999), Modernity and Power (1994), Germany and the United States (updated edition, 1994), and The Diplomacy of Ideas (1981).
Features
  • Provides survey of the ways in which the United States acquired, administered, and abandoned its various imperial possessions.
  • Offers a new interpretation of how and why America became an imperialist power.
  • Incorporates notions of imperialism, anti-imperialism, and geopolitics into American foreign policy decision making.