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America in the World: United States History in Global Context

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By: Carl Guarneri
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EDITORIAL REVIEW

This text examines how larger global processes have had a role in each stage of American development, how this country's experiences were shared by people elsewhere, and how America's growing influence ultimately changed the world. By examining American history through a global lens, Carl Guarneri creates a framework that situates specific American events within the larger realm of world history. .

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages
Pub. Date: 9th January 2007
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 336
Ean: 9780072541151
Isbn: 0072541156

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

Fair, thoughtful and very useful book
~ Written on Jan 23, 2008. out of users found this review helpful.

Since I have been recommending this little gem of a book to history teachers and world historians, I was quite surprised by another reviewer's claim that the book is "one-sided." I thought Carl Guarneri's stance to be thoughtful and reasoned, fairly situating U.S. history in a larger context. It is by design selective in the case studies, as Guarneri devotes less than 300 pages to succinctly take up a limited number of questions in U.S. and world history. Like all histories, it is selective, and thus open for disagreements about what the author chose to include. And, like all histories it should be read with and against other interpretations. That said, I thought the Guarneri's discussions of the frontier, colonies, industrialism, imperialism and connections of US to the world in 19th and 20th centuries were well-chosen, clear, engaging and thoughtful. BTW, the previous reviewer's claim about the book ignoring Tocqueville is incorrect. Indeed, Guarneri urges readers to read the "classic and still-relevant treatise" by Tocqueville. And the book has a short section contrasting various positions in the debate over exceptionalism, before making a case for reconsidering the issue. In short, this is a valuable introduction to an increasing move by historians to help us understand U.S. history by placing it on the world stage (see for example Tom Bender's A Nation Among Nations). It is a good introduction for students of both U.S. and world history.

One sided story.
~ Written on Nov 15, 2007. out of users found this review helpful.

I found this book missing much of American History and some valuable details (i.e. War of 1812, very little on WWI, or WWII). It also fails to mentions historians like Alex de Tocqueville who is the one who coined the phrase "American Exceptional ism". This wouldn't fit into Guarneri's agenda. I could go on... It is horribly one sided and doesn't give a balanced view to America. If your History teacher wishes you to read this without another book to counter the argument, be ye warned! This is a very liberal American History Book.

The Book Readers Will Wish They Had Written
~ Written on Apr 9, 2007. 2 out of 3 users found this review helpful.

This little book has taken on the big task of situating America's past within global history. It has done this extraordinarily well. The author's judgments about American exceptionalism, which run throughout the work, are measured and incisive. The high levels of analysis and synthesis reflect the author's wide reading of sources on a range of topics including migrations, comparative economic development, and empire-building from the last Ice Age to today. Perhaps best of all the writing is organized and sentences have to be read only once to be fully understood. Warning: Readers will wish they had written this book.

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