From 1932 until his death in 1990, Hal Draper was a prolific
Marxist writer and socialist organizer who successfully combined
rigorous research and passionate outrage to assess his political
era. In this still-indispensable collection of essays written in
the 1950s and 60s, Draper grapples with the role of the United
States in the world, situating post-war American imperialism in a
global picture of capitalist competition and expansion. The essays
in this volume include Draper's discussions of the United States'
involvement in Guatemala, Guam, Samoa, Cuba, Vietnam, and
elsewhere, as well as his, more general, socialist guide to
national liberation movements.
General
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