Global Dawn: The Cultural Foundation of American Internationalism, 1865-1890

Global Dawn: The Cultural Foundation of American Internationalism, 1865-1890

by Frank Ninkovich
Global Dawn: The Cultural Foundation of American Internationalism, 1865-1890

Global Dawn: The Cultural Foundation of American Internationalism, 1865-1890

by Frank Ninkovich

eBook

$54.99  $73.00 Save 25% Current price is $54.99, Original price is $73. You Save 25%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Why did the United States become a global power? Frank Ninkovich shows that a cultural predisposition for thinking in global terms blossomed in the late nineteenth century, making possible the rise to world power as American liberals of the time took a wide-ranging interest in the world. At the center of their attention was the historical process they called “civilization,” whose most prominent features—a global economy, political democracy, and a global culture—anticipated what would later come to be known as globalization.

The continued spread of civilization, they believed, provided the answer to worrisome contemporary problems such as the faltering progress of democracy, a burgeoning arms race in Europe, and a dangerous imperialist competition. In addition to transforming international politics, a global civilization quickened by commercial and cultural exchanges would advance human equality and introduce the modern industrial way of life to traditional societies. Consistent with their universalist outlook, liberal internationalists also took issue with scientific racism by refusing to acknowledge racial hierarchy as a permanent feature of relations with nonwhite peoples.

Of little practical significance during a period when isolationism reigned supreme in U.S. foreign policy, this rich body of thought would become the cultural foundation of twentieth-century American internationalism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674054370
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 02/15/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 440
File size: 586 KB

About the Author

Frank Ninkovich is Professor of History at St. John's University.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Culture and Causality 1. A Global Civilization 2. Creating an International Identity: Culture, Commerce, and Diplomacy 3. Europe I: The Mirage of Republicanism 4. Europe II: Premodern Survivals 5. The One and the Many: Race, Culture, and Civilization 6. The Promise of Local Equality: Assimilating African Americans, Chinese, and Native Americans 7. Beyond Orientalism: Explaining Other Worlds 8. Empire and Civilization 9. International Politics 10. The Future of International Relations Conclusion: Culture as Capability Notes Index

What People are Saying About This

Bringing a sensitivity both to U.S. intellectual trends and to global developments, Ninkovich explores how globalization has affected the American imagination. He finds that many American liberal thinkers in the last decades of the nineteenth century demonstrated a keen awareness of global transformative forces and their implications for U.S. international affairs, leading them to embrace the idea that the nation's contribution lay primarily in what today would be called 'soft power'--its economic, political, and cultural influence rather than through geopolitics or imperialism. This is a remarkable book, full of insights not just about the past but also about the present.

Kristin L. Hoganson

Ninkovich examines a number of Gilded Age periodicals--including The Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Weekly, and The Nation--to explain why the United States embraced imperial policies at the turn of the twentieth century and increasingly internationalist ones thereafter. He finds in their pages the intellectual groundings of a more purposeful, professional, and far-reaching diplomacy. Clearly and wittily written, this book captures a constellation of views on global interconnections at a moment in U.S. history not known for internationalist outlooks. It makes a significant contribution to the history of globalization and especially to the intellectual history of global consciousness.
Kristin L. Hoganson, author of Consumers' Imperium: The Global Production of American Domesticity, 1865–1920

Akira Iriye

Bringing a sensitivity both to U.S. intellectual trends and to global developments, Ninkovich explores how globalization has affected the American imagination. He finds that many American liberal thinkers in the last decades of the nineteenth century demonstrated a keen awareness of global transformative forces and their implications for U.S. international affairs, leading them to embrace the idea that the nation's contribution lay primarily in what today would be called 'soft power'--its economic, political, and cultural influence rather than through geopolitics or imperialism. This is a remarkable book, full of insights not just about the past but also about the present.

Akira Iriye, author of Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World

Jeremi Suri

In a deep and wide-ranging analysis of intellectual thought during the quarter century between 1865 and 1890, Frank Ninkovich describes 'the cultural foundation for the emergence of imperialism and globalism' in the United States. The internationalist ideas he chronicles were powerful and enduring influences on the dominant American vocabulary of foreign affairs. Ninkovich's clear and sensible discussion of how culture acts as a 'field of possibility' for innovative domestic and international thinking is impressive. Thoughtful and iconoclastic, this work is one of the best cultural histories of internationalism to date and is a major contribution to the literature on American foreign relations, imperialism, and culture and international affairs.

Jeremi Suri, author of Power and Protest and Henry Kissinger and the American Century

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews