This article examines American elites, mostly from the Republican Party, in the 1860s and 1870s to explain how they understood European empires, and the British Empire in particular. Specifically, it looks at leading politicians and journalists who, perhaps quite naturally, compared the rapidly expanding United States to Great Britain and its dominions. During this period, they took an increasingly internationalist outlook as they sought to demonstrate, explain and justify growing Anglo-American influence in Asia and the Americas. The article argues that while many of these men were ambivalent about, skeptical of, and sometimes even opposed to the policies of the British Empire, they also often wanted the US to adopt some of the same practi...
This dissertation is a comparative study of Anglo-American public opinion of the 1898 Spanish-Americ...
This dissertation explores American attitudes toward British imperialism between 1815 and 1860 to de...
This article argues that the contemporary American empire displays two structural limits. The first ...
The article raises the problem of American imperialism. The author proposes a new approach to the is...
Articles from American periodicals about the Hispanic west in North America published between 1800 a...
This article proposes that U.S. foreign relations in the nineteenth century were structured around t...
In the eyes of both contemporaries and historians, the United States became an empire in 1898. By ta...
This article examines the overlooked synergy between American economic expansion and British imperia...
This project examines the idea of an American republican empire from the eve of the Revolution throu...
This article reviews the educational policies of Spain and England in their most emblematic colonies...
The Civil War and Reconstruction remade the United States. The defeat of the Confederacy, end of sla...
The whirlwind of activity that occurred in American foreign policy at the end of the nineteenth cent...
Taking a global approach to the American Civil War from the vantage of China, this article explores ...
International relations have been a major aspect of almost all countries. Such was the case for the ...
Today, while the United States plunges through its third year of war against totalitarian aggression...
This dissertation is a comparative study of Anglo-American public opinion of the 1898 Spanish-Americ...
This dissertation explores American attitudes toward British imperialism between 1815 and 1860 to de...
This article argues that the contemporary American empire displays two structural limits. The first ...
The article raises the problem of American imperialism. The author proposes a new approach to the is...
Articles from American periodicals about the Hispanic west in North America published between 1800 a...
This article proposes that U.S. foreign relations in the nineteenth century were structured around t...
In the eyes of both contemporaries and historians, the United States became an empire in 1898. By ta...
This article examines the overlooked synergy between American economic expansion and British imperia...
This project examines the idea of an American republican empire from the eve of the Revolution throu...
This article reviews the educational policies of Spain and England in their most emblematic colonies...
The Civil War and Reconstruction remade the United States. The defeat of the Confederacy, end of sla...
The whirlwind of activity that occurred in American foreign policy at the end of the nineteenth cent...
Taking a global approach to the American Civil War from the vantage of China, this article explores ...
International relations have been a major aspect of almost all countries. Such was the case for the ...
Today, while the United States plunges through its third year of war against totalitarian aggression...
This dissertation is a comparative study of Anglo-American public opinion of the 1898 Spanish-Americ...
This dissertation explores American attitudes toward British imperialism between 1815 and 1860 to de...
This article argues that the contemporary American empire displays two structural limits. The first ...