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The Color of Empire - Race and American Foreign Relations (Paperback)
Loot Price: R416
Discovery Miles 4 160
You Save: R82
(16%)
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The Color of Empire - Race and American Foreign Relations (Paperback)
Series: Issues in the History of American Foreign Relations
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List price R498
Loot Price R416
Discovery Miles 4 160
You Save R82 (16%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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At first glance, it may be difficult to accept that race and racism
play a major role, whether conscious or subconscious, in
policymaking. 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 owners, segregationists, or bigots. Some
belong to America's distant past, but it was not so long ago that
the civil rights movement began to correct America's troubled race
relations. While race has rarely served as the primary motivating
factor in America's foreign policies, Michael Krenn shows that it
has functioned as both a powerful justification for U.S. actions
abroad and a significant influence on their shape, direction, and
intensity. Portraying nonwhite races as inferior allowed U.S.
policymakers to rationalize territorial expansion at the expense of
Native Americans and Mexico, to demonize the enemy in wars fought
against Filipino insurgents and Japanese soldiers, and to justify
intervention in developing nations. Racism made America's leaders
soft on European colonialism, and U.S. racial segregation laws were
an obstacle to winning hearts and minds in the developing world
during the Cold War. Race plays a more subtle role in U.S. foreign
relations today, but speeches about turning the war on terror into
a crusade, the abuse of detainees in military prisons, and apathy
toward genocide in Darfur can be explained, in part, by prejudice.
"The Color of Empire" challenges readers to recognize that American
perceptions and prejudices about race have influenced the conduct
of U.S. foreign relations from the colonial era to the present.
This concise survey is an excellent introduction to the topic
forboth students and general readers.
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