America as a Military Power: From the American Revolution to the Civil War
By (Author) Jeremy M. Black
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th June 2002
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Warfare and defence
355.00973
Paperback
248
An examination of the idea of American military exceptionalism as viewed from a British perspective. How have military actions shaped the history of the United States How have these actions shaped the wider role that the US plays in world history Historian Jeremy Black tackles these and other important questions in this examination of American military exceptionalism from the struggle for independence to the end of the Civil War. He brings to this study the critical eye of a foreign scholar, and utilizes the comments of contemporary British observers to provide a context on how American actions fit within a global perspective. This study seeks to shed light on the distinctive combination of political, social, intellectual and physical factors, including potential threats, that shaped and were shaped by the general American culture during this period. This phase of American warfare was characterized by several major conflicts: the War for Independence; the War of 1812; the Mexican War; war with Native Americans; and, finally, the Civil War. One sees a shift from a state devoting resources to conflict with neighbouring states to a nation divided, fighting for its very survival. A Black contextualizes American military developments and relates them to key events elsewhere in the world.
"Black demonstrates impressive command of the literature in this well-crafted survey demonstrating the central role of conflict in the first century of America's history as an independent country. He establishes the similarities between U.S. ways of war and general developments in the Western World, while simultaneously demonstrating the exceptionalism that reflected America's distinctive political and social character." Dennis Showalter, Colorado College
JEREMY BLACK is Professor of History at the University of Exeter