"Reforming the World" offers a sophisticated account of how and
why, in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, American
missionaries and moral reformers undertook work abroad at an
unprecedented rate and scale. Looking at various organizations such
as the Young Men's Christian Association and the Student Volunteer
Movement for Foreign Missions, Ian Tyrrell describes the influence
that the export of American values had back home, and explores the
methods and networks used by reformers to fashion a global and
nonterritorial empire. He follows the transnational American
response to internal pressures, the European colonies, and dynamic
changes in global society.
Examining the cultural context of American expansionism from the
1870s to the 1920s, Tyrrell provides a new interpretation of
Christian and evangelical missionary work, and he addresses
America's use of "soft power." He describes evangelical reform's
influence on American colonial and diplomatic policy, emphasizes
the limits of that impact, and documents the often idiosyncratic
personal histories, aspirations, and cultural heritage of moral
reformers such as Margaret and Mary Leitch, Louis Klopsch, Clara
Barton, and Ida Wells. The book illustrates that moral reform
influenced the United States as much as it did the colonial and
quasi-colonial peoples Americans came in contact with, and shaped
the architecture of American dealings with the larger world of
empires through to the era of Woodrow Wilson.
Investigating the wide-reaching and diverse influence of
evangelical reform movements, "Reforming the World" establishes how
transnational organizing played a vital role in America's political
and economic expansion.
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