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Sunday, February 3, 2019

Second World War Essay -- American History Great Powers Essays

Second World fightMy times has already witnessed a day of infamy, less than two short historic period ago (or so CNN tells us). My grandfather would remember a different day, a morning marked by another surprise attack on America. That ambush, said Japanese General Yamamoto, awakened a sleeping giant. compendium of American strange policy begs the question what if the giant had spurned its nonbelligerent slumber? Instead, the behemoth could have chosen to lumber about. Odds argon that the footsteps would not have fallen lightly, the reverberations spreading across the globe- all this, just now had Wilsonians been at the helm of American foreign policy.The Jacksonian tradition steered the unite States to victory in the Second World War. Once lulled from the comfort of its isolationism, the Americans pie-eyed the fate of the Axis powers. But had the Wilsonian tradition, a formidable contemporary here at Swarthmore and among todays democrats, directed American foreign policy l eading up to and during the war, it seems likely that history would tell a different tale. As it stood in 1941, the United States was undoubtedly entrenched in the Jacksonian camp (here at Swarthmore, I can count their sympathizers on one hand). Jacksonian policies of the United States in the 1930s and 1940s be decisive for the Allied victory, yet reflection on a reorientation of these policies toward the Wilsonian camp reveals that the Second World War could have been avoided. In this context, German domestic and foreign policy- a brutish, perverted mix of the Jacksonian and Wilsonian traditions- will then be discussed. An understanding of the Jacksonian article of faith clarifies the reasoning of the United States leading up to the war. This tradition was, and remains, stron... ...h do we authentically want to provoke the Jacksonians of this world? Works CitedBell, P.M.H. The Origins of the Second World War in Europe. 2nd edition. newlyYork Longman, 1997.Csaire, Aim. Discour se on colonialism. Colonial Discourse and Post-Colonial Theory. Ed. Patrick Williams and Laura Chrisman. New York Columbia University Press, 1994.Kennedy, Paul. The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers. New York Random House,1987.Kindleberger, Charles P. The World in Depression 1929-1939. 1973.Kurth, James. The American Way of success A Twentieth-Century Trilogy, The National Interest, Summer 2000, pp. 5-16.Kurth, James. War, Peace, and the Ideologies of the Twentieth Century, Current History, January 1999, pp.3-8.Mead, Walter Russell. The Jacksonian impost and American Foreign Policy, The National Interest, Winter 1999/2000, pp. 5-29.

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