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The dawn of the 'open door' world: ...
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Darden, Gary Helm.
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The dawn of the 'open door' world: The United States and the origins of globalization in East Asia and the American South, 1890s--1900s (Philippines).
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
The dawn of the 'open door' world: The United States and the origins of globalization in East Asia and the American South, 1890s--1900s (Philippines)./
Author:
Darden, Gary Helm.
Description:
226 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-11, Section: A, page: 4153.
Contained By:
Dissertation Abstracts International66-11A.
Subject:
History, United States. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3195668
ISBN:
054241130X
The dawn of the 'open door' world: The United States and the origins of globalization in East Asia and the American South, 1890s--1900s (Philippines).
Darden, Gary Helm.
The dawn of the 'open door' world: The United States and the origins of globalization in East Asia and the American South, 1890s--1900s (Philippines).
- 226 p.
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-11, Section: A, page: 4153.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick, 2005.
This dissertation chronicles the problematic nature of both intra-national and trans-national empires, and specifically the role of race and sovereignty within those imperial domains. Looking at the critical Age of High Imperialism in the 1890s and 1900s, the focus is on two primary case studies tied to the emergence of the United States as a world power, and the political debate that laid the ideological basis for the current Age of Globalization, one that was primarily sponsored by the United States over the long course of the twentieth century. The cases here include the liberal development plans and early years of U.S. civilian rule in the Occupied Philippines and the emergence of Jim Crow laws in the American South with its neo-colonial strictures over African Americans. What emerged by the turn of the century were two differing and competing visions of U.S. imperialism.
ISBN: 054241130XSubjects--Topical Terms:
1017393
History, United States.
The dawn of the 'open door' world: The United States and the origins of globalization in East Asia and the American South, 1890s--1900s (Philippines).
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Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 66-11, Section: A, page: 4153.
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Director: Lloyd C. Gardner.
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick, 2005.
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This dissertation chronicles the problematic nature of both intra-national and trans-national empires, and specifically the role of race and sovereignty within those imperial domains. Looking at the critical Age of High Imperialism in the 1890s and 1900s, the focus is on two primary case studies tied to the emergence of the United States as a world power, and the political debate that laid the ideological basis for the current Age of Globalization, one that was primarily sponsored by the United States over the long course of the twentieth century. The cases here include the liberal development plans and early years of U.S. civilian rule in the Occupied Philippines and the emergence of Jim Crow laws in the American South with its neo-colonial strictures over African Americans. What emerged by the turn of the century were two differing and competing visions of U.S. imperialism.
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White Northern Republicans believed that the postwar Philippines under U.S. military occupation required an imperial model based on liberal development. They concluded that three centuries of Spanish colonial rule there had wracked it with chronic under-development and a legacy of exploitation that precluded sustainable independence, especially given the rapid expansion of colonial empires in the region. Republicans instead sought for the Philippines impermanent U.S. governance, one that would deliver a new universal public school system, build a modern infrastructure, and expand mass political participation. Their design, above all, openly declared not only on the inherent "capacity" of Filipinos to develop but on their "natural" right to independence---a nascent post-colonial approach that the region's Colonial Empires steadfastly denounced.
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This Republican blueprint for societal development was not without precedent, as it had many important historic parallels to what their predecessors had done during the military occupation of the South with Radical Reconstruction. There they not only deracialized national citizenship to include the Freedmen, but reinforced their access to liberal development with federal funding for universal public schools and universal male suffrage. These efforts were a genuine attempt to make Emancipation sustainable given the recognized legacy of under-development and exploitation associated with slavery.
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White Southern Democrats, on the other hand, having failed to win control of the instruments of federal power during the elections at the turn of the century, retreated to the South where they championed the semi-sovereignty of states rights. This rationale, with its deep ideological roots in the region, offered them an intra-imperial terrain. There they sought their own imperial vision of colonial permanence within the South that through Jim Crow laws arrested the liberal developmental rights that African Americans had secured from white Northern Republicans during Reconstruction. This new generation of Democrats reconciled their illiberal and permanent model along lines of racial exceptionalism, one that steadfastly denied any "natural" capacity for African Americans to develop or coexist equally with whites, and thus hung strikingly close to the European imperial rationale so central to the Age of High Imperialism.
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http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=3195668
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