1st Edition

Race and U.S. Foreign Policy in the Ages of Territorial and Market Expansion, 1840-1900

Edited By E. Nathaniel Gates Copyright 1998
424 Pages
by Routledge

First Published in 1998. Explores the concept of "race"  The term "race," which originally denoted genealogical or class identity, has in the comparatively brief span of 300 years taken on an entirely new meaning. In the wake of the Enlightenment it came to be applied to social groups. This ideological transformation coupled with a dogmatic insistence that the groups so designated were... Read more
Chapter 1 The White Man’s Burden; Chapter 2 Initial Contacts: Redeeming Texas from Mexicans, 1821–1836; Chapter 3 The Origins of Anti-Mexican Sentiment in the United States, Raymund A. Paredes; Chapter 4 “Scarce more than apes.” Historical Roots of Anglo American Stereotypes of Mexicans in the Border Region; Chapter 5 Mexican Opinion, American Racism, and the War of 1846, Gene M. Brack; Chapter 6 The Slavery Problem in the Diplomacy of the American Civil War, Kinley J. Brauer; Chapter 7 Sambo and the Heathen Chinee: Californians’ Racial Stereotypes in the Late 1870s, Luther W. Spoehr; Chapter 8 Frederick Douglass and American Diplomacy in the Caribbean, Merline Pitre; Chapter 9 Racism and The Imperialist Campaign; Chapter 10 Imperialism and The Anglo-Saxon; Chapter 11 The Anti-Imperialists, the Philippines, and the Inequality of Man, Christopher Lasch; Chapter 12 Race and American Expansion in Cuba and Puerto Rico, 1895–1905, Philip W. Kennedy; Chapter 13 The Racial Overtones of Imperialism as a Campaign Issue, 1900; Chapter 14 Black Americans and the Quest for Empire, 1898–1903, Willard B. GatewoodJr; Chapter 15 David Fagen: An Afro-American Rebel in the Philippines, 1899–1901, Michael C. Robinson, Frank N. Schubert; Chapter 16 Booker T. Washington and the White Man’s Burden, Louis R. Harlan; Chapter 17 Opposition of Negro Newspapers to American Philippine Policy, 1899–1900 * During 1899–1900 there were 150 Negro newspapers, mostly weeklies, in existence. The author was able to examine 30 of these in the Schomburg Collection, New York City. Not one newspaper file was complete for 1899 and 1900. In half the cases, e.g., the Boston Courant, a Particularly valuable paper for this study, only one issue is extant., George P. Maries; Chapter 18 Racial Anglo-Saxonism and the American Response to the Boer War, Stuart Anderson; Chapter 19 Black Americans and the Boer War, 1899–1902, Willard B. Gatewood;

Biography

Micheal L. Kreen, University of Miami