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The Color of Empire : Race and American Foreign Relations /

"At first glance, it may be difficult to accept that race and racism play a major role, whether conscious or subconscious, in policy-making. But leaders are products of their upbringing and era, and even some of America's best-educated presidents and secretaries of state have been slave ow...

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Krenn, Michael L., 1957- (Auteur)
Format: Électronique eBook
Langue:Inglés
Publié: Washington, D.C. : Potomac Books, Inc., [2006]
Édition:First Edition.
Collection:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:Texto completo
Table des matières:
  • White
  • Brown
  • Yellow
  • Black
  • Appendix of documents: 1. Benjamin Franklin, "observations concerning the increase of mankind," 1751
  • 2. Thomas Jefferson reflects on the issues of African Americans and slavery, 1785
  • 3. Josiah C. Nott speaks on the natural history of mankind, 1850
  • 4. President Andrew Jackson calls for the removal of Native Americans westward, 1830
  • 5. Sam Houston rallies his fellow Texans, 1836
  • 6. John Fiske on the evolution of races, 1873
  • 7. Reverend Josiah strong prophesizes on God, the Anglo-Saxon, and the world, 1891
  • 8. Senator Albert J. Beveridge defends America's actions in the Philippines, January 9, 1900
  • 9. Anti-Chinese sentiment in California, 1878
  • 10. Lothrop Stoddard warns of the rising yellow tide, 1922
  • Time instructs its readers on how to tell a "Jap" from a "friend," 1941
  • 12. Charles Lindbergh witnesses the war in the Pacific, 1944
  • 13. "Constructive engagement" with white regimes in Southern Africa, 1969
  • 14. U.S. GI testifies about atrocities and "gooks," 1971
  • 15. Martin Luther King Jr. condemns the Vietnam War, 1967.