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- catalog contributor b8468975.
- catalog coverage "United States Colonial question.".
- catalog created "[1970]".
- catalog date "1970".
- catalog date "[1970]".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "[1970]".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "Introduction: The white man's burden, by R. Kipling.-Part 1: The rationales for American overseas expansion: It was au courant mainifest destiny, by J.W. Pratt. Imperialism was the antithesis of manifest destiny, by F. Merk. America was engulfed by a psychic crisis, by R. Hofstadter. Economic motives were the decisive factors, by W.A. Williams.-Part 2: The decision for war against Spain: Cleveland's view of the Cuban crisis, 7 December 1896, by G. Cleveland. McKinley's view of the Cuban crisis, 6 December 1897, by W. McKinley. The business community was reluctant, by J.W. Pratt. The business community was the most influential lobby for war, by W. LaFeber. The President asks for war, 11 April 1898, by W. McKinley.-Part 3: The decision to take Hawaii and the Philippines: Without the war Hawaii might never have been ours, by T.A. Bailey. McKinley got what he wanted, by H.W. Morgan. Instructions to the Peace Commissioners, by W. McKinley. The Philippines were insular stepping stones to the Chinese pot of gold, by T.J. McCormick. The Filipino point of view, by T.A. Agoncillo.-Part 4: The protest against imperialism: The anti-imperialists: too few too feeble, by F.H. Harrington. Bryan was caught in a trap, by P.E. Coletta. The 1900 election was a mandate for partisanship, not imperialism, by T.A. Bailey.-Part 5: Epilogue: American and European imperialism compared, by R.W. Winks.".
- catalog extent "xii, 206 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "American imperialism in 1898.".
- catalog identifier "0471605107".
- catalog isFormatOf "American imperialism in 1898.".
- catalog isPartOf "Problems in American history (John Wiley & Sons)".
- catalog isPartOf "Problems in American history".
- catalog issued "1970".
- catalog issued "[1970]".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York, Wiley".
- catalog relation "American imperialism in 1898.".
- catalog spatial "United States Colonial question.".
- catalog subject "973.8/8 18".
- catalog subject "E713 .M63".
- catalog subject "Spanish-American War, 1898.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: The white man's burden, by R. Kipling.-Part 1: The rationales for American overseas expansion: It was au courant mainifest destiny, by J.W. Pratt. Imperialism was the antithesis of manifest destiny, by F. Merk. America was engulfed by a psychic crisis, by R. Hofstadter. Economic motives were the decisive factors, by W.A. Williams.-Part 2: The decision for war against Spain: Cleveland's view of the Cuban crisis, 7 December 1896, by G. Cleveland. McKinley's view of the Cuban crisis, 6 December 1897, by W. McKinley. The business community was reluctant, by J.W. Pratt. The business community was the most influential lobby for war, by W. LaFeber. The President asks for war, 11 April 1898, by W. McKinley.-Part 3: The decision to take Hawaii and the Philippines: Without the war Hawaii might never have been ours, by T.A. Bailey. McKinley got what he wanted, by H.W. Morgan. Instructions to the Peace Commissioners, by W. McKinley. The Philippines were insular stepping stones to the Chinese pot of gold, by T.J. McCormick. The Filipino point of view, by T.A. Agoncillo.-Part 4: The protest against imperialism: The anti-imperialists: too few too feeble, by F.H. Harrington. Bryan was caught in a trap, by P.E. Coletta. The 1900 election was a mandate for partisanship, not imperialism, by T.A. Bailey.-Part 5: Epilogue: American and European imperialism compared, by R.W. Winks.".
- catalog title "American imperialism in 1898; the quest for national fulfillment. Edited by Richard H. Miller.".
- catalog type "text".