Although Americans have long celebrated their nation's diversity, they also have consistently harbored suspicions of foreign peoples both at home and abroad. In Age of Fear, Zachary Smith argues that, as World War I grew more menacing and the presumed German threat loomed over the United States, many white "Anglo-Saxon" Americans grew increasingly concerned about the vulnerability of their race, culture, and authority. Consequently, they directed their long-held apprehensions over ethnic and racial pluralism onto their German neighbors and overseas enemies whom they had once greatly admired.
Smith examines the often racially tinged, apocalyptic arguments made during the war by politicians, propaganda agencies, the press, novelists, and artists. He also assesses citizens' reactions to these messages and explains how the rise of nationalism in the United States and Europe acted as a catalyst to hierarchical racism. Germans in both the United States and Europe eventually took the form of the proverbial "Other," a dangerous, volatile, and uncivilized people who posed an existential threat to the nation and all that Anglo-Saxon Americans believed themselves to be.
Exploring what the Great War meant to a large portion of the white American population while providing a historic precedent for modern-day conceptions of presumably dangerous foreign Others, Age of Fear is a compelling look at how the source of wartime paranoia can be found in deep-seated understandings of racial and millennial progress.
Author(s): Zachary Smith
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 249
City: Baltimore
Contents......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 10
Introduction......Page 16
1. Identity, Decline, and Preparedness, 1914–1917......Page 32
2. The Emergence of the Internal Enemy Other, 1914–1917......Page 59
3. The War on the Internal Enemy Other, 1917–1918......Page 84
4. Resisting Regressive Militarism, 1917–1918......Page 117
5. Toward the Democratic Millennium, 1914–1918......Page 153
Epilogue: Fear, Othering, and Identity in the Postwar United States......Page 181
Notes......Page 196
Bibliography......Page 230
C......Page 242
G......Page 243
J......Page 244
N......Page 245
R......Page 246
W......Page 247
Z......Page 248