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Wilsonian Visions - The Williamstown Institute of Politics and American Internationalism after the First World War (Hardcover)
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Wilsonian Visions - The Williamstown Institute of Politics and American Internationalism after the First World War (Hardcover)
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In Wilsonian Visions, James McAllister recovers the history of the
most influential forum of American liberal internationalism in the
immediate aftermath of the First World War: The Williamstown
Institute of Politics. Established in 1921 by Harry A. Garfield,
the president of Williams College, the Institute was dedicated to
promoting an informed perspective on world politics even as the
United States, still gathering itself after World War I, retreated
from the Wilsonian vision of active involvement in European
political affairs. Located on the Williams campus in the Berkshire
Mountains of Western Massachusetts, the Institute's annual summer
session of lectures and roundtables attracted scholars, diplomats,
and peace activists from around the world. Newspapers and press
services reported the proceedings and controversies of the
Institute to an American public divided over fundamental questions
about US involvement in the world. In an era where the institutions
of liberal internationalism were just taking shape, Garfield's
institutional model was rapidly emulated by colleges and
universities across the US. McAllister narrates the career of the
Institute, tracing its roots back to the tragedy of the First World
War and Garfield's disappointment in America's failure to join the
League of Nations. He also shows the Progressive Era origins of the
Institute and the importance of the political and intellectual
relationship formed between Garfield and Wilson at Princeton
University in the early 1900s. Drawing on new and previously
unexamined archival materials, Wilsonian Visions restores the
Institute to its rightful status in the intellectual history of US
foreign relations and shows it to be a formative institution as the
country transitioned from domestic isolation to global engagement.
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