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Hardcover The Dominion of War: Liberty and Empire in North America, 1500-2000 Book

ISBN: 0670033707

ISBN13: 9780670033706

The Dominion of War: Liberty and Empire in North America, 1500-2000

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Book Overview

Americans often think of their nation?s history as a movement toward ever-greater democracy, equality, and freedom. Wars in this story are understood both as necessary to defend those values and as exceptions to the rule of peaceful progress. In The Dominion of War , historians Fred Anderson and Andrew Cayton boldly reinterpret the development of the United States, arguing instead that war has played a leading role in shaping North America from the...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Classic

A monumental synthesis, a towering, brave work of beautifully written and exhaustively studied history - and this is all the reception it gets? This should be required reading for every American, precisely because it may be debatable or controversial in its points or selections. There is no question in my mind that this magnificent book will stand ever larger in history, as its profound yet caustic thesis receives its next confirmation by the imperial aggression by the national security monolith we have inherited.

Peace-loving USA forced into war? Maybe Not

Starting with the 1st French efforts to trade in North America, the authors argue that our self-image as peace-loving people who only fight when left no alternative, is often at odds with the facts. Second recurring theme is how military victories can produce unforeseen problems. Among the founding fathers, even those best disposed to the Indians, who wanted treaty-settlements instead of wars, assumed that they would either assimilate or move west. The War with Mexico and Spanish-American War are examples of US aggression that few would dispute. A very intriguing chapter describes Washington DC's 1930 Greco-Roman monuments as efforts to condition isolationist Americans to possibility of World War. Sound crazy? Think of the movies Shane, High Noon, and Sgt. York-- always the peace-loving hero is pushed into a [satisfying] explosion of righteous violence. See also Anderson's The War That Made America; short history of French & Indian War

Outstanding

A recurring theme noticed by the American expatriate community is the vast difference in how foreigners view America and how Americans view themselves, especially in regards to how America has dealt with other countries. In the realm of literature and history, there have been few works that have bridged this divide, and most of them dealt with narrow topics; such as US - Mexico relation, or US - Japan relations in the 20th century. This book is probably one of the few that offers a long-term historical analysis of America's foreign policy from colonial days to the end of the 20th century. Starting from the early 1500s and ending with the 20th century, the book examines America's territorial and economic expansion by tracing the lives and careers of several famous / infamous military leaders. Most are American, such as Colin Powell and George Washington. There are also some non-Americans, such as Champlain and General Santa Anna. But all lead careers that defined the destiny of America. The book reads very quickly, and the authors are objective in their style. The authors have produced a great history book from the foundations of several biographies. Probably the best feature of this book is its critical examination of how war can and often does destroy both victor and vanquished. This point is illustrates several times in this book, using both England and the US as examples of victors in war who went on to pay dearly later on. I recommend reading this book.

A readable and very important book

As is well known, American leaders tend to justify wars by explaining them as operations in defense of liberty and democracy. This important book examines that notion through the impact of several historically key men on North America. They include Samuel de Champlain, whose missionizing and choosing up sides in various Indian wars set the stage for "the most widespread and destructive warfare in North American history"; William Penn, whose sincere efforts to coexist peacefully with the Indians degenerated into the unapologetic expansionism of his heirs; George Washington, who foresaw so many of the dangers of military intervention abroad; the tempestuous and bullying Andrew Jackson, who owned slaves, relocated thousands of Indians west of the Mississippi, and set the stage for ongoing wars of conquest in the name of freedom and liberty (and who had the gall to argue that relocating the Indians was "not only liberal, but generous"); Ulysses Grant, reluctant participant in the land-grabbing war with Mexico, a man who clearly understood that such aggressive moves always bring punishing consequences; the grandstanding Douglas MacArthur, aging momma's boy and self-appointed missionary of Christianity and liberty, finally relieved of command by Truman for suggesting that the United States nuke China; and Colin Powell, whose highly distinguished military career ran parallel with a habit of doing what he was told while silencing his doubts--doubts that nearly always turned out to be realistically based. "I had been conditioned to believe in the wisdom of my superiors...." The authors of this book tell a balanced tale without heavy-handed recourse to the lessons unlearned from history, but the lessons stand out anyway: the conquest of the Phillipines, for example, so many of whose citizens died in the American attempt to liberate them in a bloody, exhausting campaign that only ended when the occupation did. Concentration camps and torture inflicted by MacArthur's soldiers stained these attempts to mold a nation's fate from above, as did Roosevelt's propagandistic declaration that the insurrection was over (July 4, 1902) when in fact it would not end for many years. A poignant event might well give food for thought: Woodrow Wilson's 1916 draft of a speech to Congress, which stated that "it shall not lie with American people to dictate to another people what their government shall be or what use they shall have or what persons they shall encourage or favor." Reviewing the speech, Secretary of State Robert Lansing wrote: "Haiti, S. Domingo, Nicaragua, Panama" in the margin by way of comment (he might have added Cuba, Mexico, and the Phillipines), whereupon Wilson gave up on the speech, a decision that may well mark a significant difference between the politics of his time and our own.

Imperialism and ideology

This is a very insightful account of American history in the chord of imperial expansion, telling the story that doesn't quite appear in standard accounts. We are so habituated to the American narrative that we forget the terrible legacy of expansionism, and its endless betrayals and ethnic cleansing. One useful feature of the account is to start in the sixteenth century, and show the change that came over the relations of settlers and Native Indians. A further key is to include the complexities of the Seven Years War to that of the American Revolution, showing their direct connection (the same for the Mexican-American War and the Civil War). The story of William Penn and his pacifism and good relations with the Indians is like a forgotten echo, and, as with this case, it is important to see how much of our history is a story of the defeat of good intentions as the lowest common denominator of imperial conquest seems to take over. The case of Penn and Pennsylvannia is a reminder of what might/should/could have been, leaving no excuse for the teleological fallacies of the great American narrative.
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