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Overview
This best-selling text presents the best synthesis of current scholarship available to emphasize the theme of expansionism and its manifestations.
- The text has been thoroughly updated throughout to integrate new, relevant scholarship. While the subjects of diplomacy, war, economic intercourse, and politics remain central to the presentation of the foreign-relations story, the cultural dimensions of foreign relations are also discussed.
- In Volume 2, analysis of recent events has been expanded and includes a discussion of Obama's foreign policies toward the Middle East and Asia, along with the “Arab Spring,” the AIDS crisis, and global warming.
- COURSEREADER: AMERICAN FOREIGN RELATIONS, a new customizable online source reader available with the text, has been designed to complement AMERICAN FOREIGN RELATIONS, 8th Edition with primary sources from significant events in foreign relations history. The reader is organized into chapters that correspond to the text, and editor's choice selections recommended by Cengage authors provide a set of sources that are time-saving starting points for instructors to modify as they see fit.
- Each chapter opens with a significant dramatic event-a “Diplomatic Crossroad”-that helps illustrate the chief characteristics and issues of the era at hand.
- Captioned illustrations from collections around the world are closely tied with the narrative.
- Maps, graphs, and “Makers of American Foreign Relations” tables in each chapter provide essential information for students.
- The “What If. . .” feature uses counterfactuals to engage students and encourage them to reconsider past foreign relations policies.
- Chapter bibliographies suggest readings for further study and serve as a starting point for research. The “General Bibliography” at the conclusion of the book is also a great resource for the beginning of a research project.
1. Embryo of Empire: Americans and the World Before 1789.
2. Independence, Expansion, and War, 1789–1815.
3. Extending and Preserving the Empire, 1815–1848.
4. Expansionism, Sectionalism, and Civil War, 1848–1865.
5. Establishing Regional Hegemony and Global Power, 1865–1895.
6. Imperialist Leap, 1895–1900.
7. Managing, Policing, and Extending the Empire, 1900–1914.
8. War, Peace, and Revolution in the Time of Wilson, 1914–1920.
Appendix: Makers of American Foreign Relations.
General Bibliography.
6. Diplomatic Crossroad: The Maine, McKinley, and War, 1898. The Venezuelan Crisis of 1895. American Men of Empire. Each in His Own Way: Cleveland and McKinley Confront Cuba Libre, 1895-1898. The Spanish-American-Cuban-Filipino War. Men versus “Aunties”: The Debate over Empire in the United States. Imperial Collisions in Asia: The Philippine Insurrection and the Open Door in China. The Elbows of a World Power, 1895-1900.
2. Independence, Expansion, and War, 1789–1815.
3. Extending and Preserving the Empire, 1815–1848.
4. Expansionism, Sectionalism, and Civil War, 1848–1865.
5. Establishing Regional Hegemony and Global Power, 1865–1895.
6. Imperialist Leap, 1895–1900.
7. Managing, Policing, and Extending the Empire, 1900–1914.
8. War, Peace, and Revolution in the Time of Wilson, 1914–1920.
Appendix: Makers of American Foreign Relations.
General Bibliography.
6. Diplomatic Crossroad: The Maine, McKinley, and War, 1898. The Venezuelan Crisis of 1895. American Men of Empire. Each in His Own Way: Cleveland and McKinley Confront Cuba Libre, 1895-1898. The Spanish-American-Cuban-Filipino War. Men versus “Aunties”: The Debate over Empire in the United States. Imperial Collisions in Asia: The Philippine Insurrection and the Open Door in China. The Elbows of a World Power, 1895-1900.