Major Problems in American Foreign Relations, Volume I: To 1920
, by Merrill, Dennis; Paterson, Thomas- ISBN: 9780547218243 | 0547218249
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 9/10/2009
| Explaining American Foreign Relations | |
| Essays | |
| The Unique American Prism | |
| The Open Door Policy: Economic Expansion and the Remaking of Societies | |
| The Pursuit of Interests and a Balance of Power | |
| The Gendering of Peoples and Nations | |
| The Power of Race | |
| Culture, National Identity, and the Myth of America | |
| The Origins Of American Foreign Policy In The Revolutionary Era | |
| Documents | |
| Governor John Winthrop Envisions a City Upon a Hill, 1630 | |
| Massachusetts Explains French Interest in American Independence and Cautions Against Alliance, 1775 | |
| The Patriot Thomas Paine Demands Severance from the British Empire, " 1776 | |
| The Declaration of Independence, 1776 | |
| Treaties with France Secure an Alliance, 1778 | |
| Treaty of Paris Secures American Independence, 1783 | |
| Federalist No. 4: There Is Strength in Union | |
| Foreign Policy Powers in the Constitution, 1789 | |
| Essays | |
| The Treaty of Alliance With France and American Isolationism | |
| Revolutionary Internationalists Engage a Harsh World | |
| The Great Debate Of The 1790S | |
| Documents | |
| Secretary of State | |
| Defends the Treaty with France, 1793 | |
| Secretary of the Treasury | |
| Urges Voiding the Treaty with France, 1793 | |
| Jay's Treaty, 1794 | |
| Virginia Senator | |
| Proposes Commercial Restrictions Against Britain, 1795 | |
| A Democratic-Republican Society Blasts Jay's Treaty, 1795 | |
| Hamilton Defends Jay's Treaty, 1795 | |
| President George Washington Cautions | |
| Against Factionalism and Permanent | |
| Alliances in His Farewell Address, 1796 | |
| Essays | |
| Prudence and Logic: Hamilton and Jay's Treaty | |
| Hamilton, Jay, and the Federalists: Partisan Anglophiles | |
| The Louisiana Purchase | |
| Documents | |
| Haitian General Toussaint Louverture Accuses the Jefferson Administration of a Racial Slight, 1801 | |
| President Jefferson Assesses the French Threat in New Orleans, 1802 | |
| First Consul of France Napoleon Bonaparte Explains the Need to Sell Louisiana to the United States, 1803 | |
| American Minister to France | |
| Recounts the Paris Negotiations, 1803 | |
| Federalist Hamilton Debunks Jefferson's Diplomacy, 1803 | |
| Jefferson Instructs Captain Meriwether Lewis on Exploration, 1803 | |
| Essays | |
| Jefferson's Risky Diplomacy of Watching and Waiting | |
| Patience, Deft Diplomacy, and Continental Empire | |
| The War Of 1812 | |
| Documents | |
| Secretary of State Madison Protests British Impressment of Americans from the Chesapeake, 1807 | |
| The Embargo Act Forbids U.S. Exports, 1807 | |
| Massachusetts Federalist Josiah Quincy Denounces Calls for War, 1809 | |
| The Non-Intercourse Act Replaces the Embargo Act, 1809 | |
| Shawnee Chief Tecumseh Condemns U.S. Land Grabs and Plays the British Card, 1810 | |
| Kentucky Republican | |
| Articulates U.S. Grievances Against Britain, 1811 | |
| President Madison Urges Congress to Declare War on Great Britain, 1812 | |
| Former President Jefferson Predicts the Easy Conquest of Canada, 1812 | |
| Essays | |
| Economic Coercion and the Conquest of Canada: Madison's Failed Diplomacy | |
| The Patriotic War | |
| The Monroe Doctrine | |
| Documents | |
| Secretary of State | |
| Against the Search for "Monsters to Destroy," 1821 | |
| British Foreign Secretary | |
| Canning Proposes a Joint Declaration, 1823 | |
| Jefferson Advises President | |
| Cooperate with Britain, 1823 | |
| Adams Argues Against a Joint Anglo-American Declaration in Cabinet Meeting of November 7, 1823 | |
| The Monroe Doctrine Declares the Western Hemisphere Closed to European Intervention, 1823 | |
| Colombia Requests an Explanation of U.S. Intentions, 1824 | |
| Representative | |
| Plays the Race (and Cuban) Card, 1826 | |
| Argentina Warns | |
| Against the Threat | |
| "Monroism" to the Independence of Spanish America, n.d | |
| Essays | |
| In Defense of the Nation and Hemispheric Republicanism | |
| Piero Gleijeses? | |
| Expansionist Ambition, Not Republican Sympathies | |
| Domestic Politics and Personal Ambitions | |
| Westward Expansion And Indian Removal | |
| Documents | |
| Representative Edward Everett Denounces Removal, 1830 | |
| The Indian Removal Act Authorizes Transfer of East Tribes to the West, 1830 | |
| The Cherokee Nation Protests the Removal Policy, 1830 | |
| President Andrew Jackson Defends Removal, 1830 | |
| Cherokee Nation v. the State of Georgia | |
| The Supreme Court Refuses Jurisdiction | |
| Over Indian Affairs, 1831 | |
| Cherokee Chief | |
| Denounces U.S. Removal Policy, 1836 | |
| Essays | |
| The Origins of Removal and the Fate of the Southeastern Indians | |
| Debating the Legality and Wisdom of Indian Removal | |
| Manifest Destiny, Texas, And The War With Mexico | |
| Documents | |
| Battle Cry for Texan Independence, 1835 | |
| General Antonio L?pez de Santa Anna Defends Mexican Sovereignty over Texas, 1837 | |
| Democratic Publicist | |
| Proclaims America's Manifest Destiny, 1839 | |
| President | |
| Claim to Texas and Oregon, 1845 | |
| Polk Asks Congress to Declare War on Mexico, 1846 | |
| The Wilmot Proviso Raises the Issue of Slavery in the Newly Acquired Territories, 1846 | |
| Massachusetts | |
| Webster Protests the War with Mexico and the Admission of New States to the Union, 1848 | |
| Mexican Patriots Condemn U.S. Aggression, 1850 | |
| Essays | |
| The Ideology and Spirit of Manifest Destiny | |
| Empire By Design, Not Destiny | |
| Expansion To The Pacific And Asia | |
| Documents | |
| American Merchants in Canton Plead for Protection During the Opium Crisis, 1839. | |
| Representative Caleb Cushing: "God Forbid Cooperating with the British," 1840 | |
| A Chinese Official Recommends Pitting American Barbarians Against British Barbarians, 1841 | |
| Secretary of State Webster Instructs Caleb Cushing on Negotiating with China, 1843 | |
| Webster Warns European Powers Away from Hawai'i, 1851 | |
| Instructions to Commodore | |
| His Expedition to Japan, 1852 | |
| Ii Naosuke, Feudal Lord of Hikone, Advocates Accommodation with the United States, 1853 | |
| Tokugawa Nariaki, Feudal Lord of Mito, Argues Against Peace, 1853 | |
| Essays | |
| Trade, Anglo-American Rivalry, and the Origins of U.S. China Policy | |
| The Origins of the U.S.-Japanese Clash | |
| The Diplomacy Of The Civil War | |
| Documents | |
| South Carolina Senator James H. Hammond Thunders: "Cotton is King," 1858 | |
| Secretary of State | |
| Presents "Some Thoughts for the President's Consideration," 1861 | |
| President | |
| Proclaims a Blockade, 1861 | |
| Seward Warns the British, 1861 | |
| Senator | |
| Over the Trent Affair, 1862 | |
| Seward Warns Europe Against Intervention in Mexico, 1862 | |
| The Emancipation Proclamation, 1862-1863 | |
| Ambassador Charles Francis Adams Protests the Iron Clads, 1863 | |
| Essays | |
| British Realpolitik Trumps "King Cotton" | |
| British Intervention: A Very Close Call | |
| Becoming A World Power In The Late Nineteenth Century Documents | |
| Future Secretary of State | |
| Dreams of Hemispheric Empire, 1860 | |
| President | |
| Urges Annexation of the Dominican Republic, 1870 | |
| Congress Calls for a Pan American Conference, 1888 | |
| Captain Alfred T. Mahan Advocates a Naval Build-Up, 1890 | |
| Queen Liliuokalani Protests U.S. | |
| Intervention in Hawai'i, 1893, 1897 | |
| Secretary of State | |
| Trumpets U.S. Hegemony During the Venezuela Crisis, 1895 | |
| Beveridge Summons America to | |
| Its Imperial Mission, 1898 | |
| Essays | |
| Economic Primacy, Righteous Nationalism, and an Activist State | |
| The Civil War and the Creed of Progress | |
| State-Centered Realism: How a Weak U.S. Government Inhibited World Power | |
| The Spanish-American-Cuban-Filipino War | |
| Documents | |
| Cuban Nationalist Jos? | |
| Mart? | |
| Cautions Against Annexation to the United States, 1895 | |
| Spanish Minister Enrique Dupuy de L?me | |
| Criticizes President William McKinley, 1897 | |
| Senator Redfield Proctor Condemns Spain's Reconcentrado Policy, 1898 | |
| "Peace - But Quit That": Uncle Sam Defends | |
| Cuba's Feminine Virtue, 1898 | |
| "Another Old Woman Tries to Sweep Back the Sea" | |
| Critics Lampoon McKinley as Indecisive and Unmanly, 1898 | |
| McKinley Asks Congress to Authorize War, 1898 | |
| The Teller Amendment Disavows the U.S. Annexation of Cuba, 1898 | |
| The Platt Amendment Restricts Cuba's Independence, 1903 | |
| Essays | |
| Preserving the American System | |
| Manhood, Chivalry, and McKinley's Reluctant Decision for War | |
| Derailing Cuban Nationalism and Asserting U.S. Hegemony | |
| Empire And Ambition In Asia: China And The Philippines | |
| Documents | |
| Emilio Aguinaldo Rallies the Philippine People to Arms, 1899 | |
| American Anti-Imperialist League Platform, 1899 | |
| President McKinley Preaches His Imperial Gospel, 1899 | |
| The Open Door Notes Call for Equal Trade | |
| Opportunity and Chinese Independence, 1899-1900 | |
| The Boxers Lash out at Christian Missionaries and Converts, 1900 | |
| Corporal | |
| Describes the "Water Cure," 1902 | |
| Major Cornelias Gardner Recalls the Horrors of War, 1902 | |
| Essays | |
| The Open Door Constituency's Pressure for U.S. Activism in China | |
| America's Race War in the Philippines | |
| The Policy of Attraction: Promoting Philippine Political, Economic, and Cultural Dependency | |
| Theodore Roosevelt, the Big Stick, and U.S. Hegemony in the Caribbean | |
| Documents | |
| New York Governor Theodore Roosevelt | |
| Preaches the Manly Virtues of Overseas Expansion, 1899 | |
| Argentine Foreign Minister | |
| Condemns the Collection of Debts by Force, 1902 | |
| The Panama Canal Treaty Grants the United States a Zone of Occupation, 1903 | |
| President | |
| Enumerates Colombia's Grievances | |
| Against the United States, 1904 | |
| The Roosevelt Corollary Asserts U.S. Police Power | |
| Over the Western Hemisphere, 1904 | |
| Rub?n Dario's "To Roosevelt," 1905 | |
| Essays | |
| Bravado and Bluster: TR's Sphere of Influence in the Caribbean | |
| TR's Civilizing Mission: Race, Gender, and Dollar Diplomacy | |
| TR 's Measured Response to Political Instability and European Encroachment | |
| The First World War, And The League Fight | |
| Documents | |
| The First Lusitania Note Requests Germany to Halt Submarine Warfare, 1915 | |
| President Woodrow Wilson Asks | |
| Congress to Declare War Against Germany, 1917 | |
| Follette Voices His Dissent, 1917 | |
| Proclaims U.S. War Aims: The Fourteen Points, 1918 | |
| Articles 10 through 16 of the League of Nations Covenant, 1919 | |
| Defends the Peace Treaty and League, 1919 | |
| Cabot Lodge Proposes | |
| Reservations to the League Covenant, 1919 | |
| Recalls the Shandong Question and China's May Fourth Movement, 1927 | |
| Essays | |
| From Peace to War: Progressive Internationalists Confront the Forces of Reaction | |
| A Passionate Visionary Stumbles Into War | |
| Wilsonianism and Anticolonial Nationalism: A Dream Deferred | |
| Table of Contents provided by Publisher. All Rights Reserved. |
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