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This study provides the first book-length account of US-Habsburg
relations from their origins in the early nineteenth century
through the aftermath of World War I and the Paris Peace
Conference. By including not only high-level diplomacy but also an
analysis of diplomats' ceremonial and social activities, as well as
an exploration of consular efforts to determine the citizenship
status of thousands of individuals who migrated between the two
countries, Nicole M. Phelps demonstrates the influence of the
Habsburg government on the integration of the United States into
the nineteenth-century great power system and the influence of
American racial politics on the Habsburg empire's conceptions of
nationalism and democracy. In the crisis of World War I, the
US-Habsburg relationship transformed international politics from a
system in which territorial sovereignty protected diversity to one
in which nation-states based on racial categories were considered
ideal.
This study provides the first book-length account of US-Habsburg
relations from their origins in the early nineteenth century
through the aftermath of World War I and the Paris Peace
Conference. By including not only high-level diplomacy but also an
analysis of diplomats' ceremonial and social activities, as well as
an exploration of consular efforts to determine the citizenship
status of thousands of individuals who migrated between the two
countries, Nicole M. Phelps demonstrates the influence of the
Habsburg government on the integration of the United States into
the nineteenth-century great power system and the influence of
American racial politics on the Habsburg empire's conceptions of
nationalism and democracy. In the crisis of World War I, the
US-Habsburg relationship transformed international politics from a
system in which territorial sovereignty protected diversity to one
in which nation-states based on racial categories were considered
ideal.
Americans and International Affairs to 1921 offers an
interpretation of US diplomatic history that incorporates recent
expansions in the field, focusing on the construction and
contestation of US sovereignty and borders by both official and
private institutions and individuals. Foregrounding relations with
Britain and Native Americans, the book emphasizes changes in law
and norms; property rights; the scope of government power; finances
and revenue; immigration policy; and the racialized and gendered
rhetoric of "civilization." The chronologically organized chapters
cover the colonial period through the Articles of Confederation;
the Constitution and the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars;
the collapse of the Spanish New World empire and related conflicts
over the future of slavery; the Civil War and resulting changes to
citizenship and the federal government; the development of a
federal immigration bureaucracy and formal empire; and a temporally
and geographically capacious approach to World War I. The book can
stand alone as a survey of the United States in the world to 1921,
but it was designed to be used in US diplomatic history courses in
which instructors can combine it with material from their own areas
of expertise and/or with student research projects. Each chapter
contains notes and a bibliography to support the chapter, as well
as an additional bibliography of scholarship on topics beyond the
scope of the chapter. The book includes a number of original maps,
plus a variety of primary source images and essential documents, as
well as a guide to online primary source collections.
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