The Early Imperial Republic: From the American Revolution to the U.S.–Mexican War

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Created in a world of empires, the United States was to be something new: an expansive republic proclaiming commitments to liberty and equality but eager to extend its territory and influence. Yet from the beginning, Native powers, free and enslaved Black people, and foreign subjects perceived, interacted with, and resisted the young republic as if it was merely another empire under the sun. Such perspectives have driven scholars to reevaluate the early United States, as the parameters of early American history have expanded in Atlantic, continental, and global directions. If the nation’s acquisition of Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippine Islands in 1898 traditionally marked its turn toward imperialism, new scholarship suggests the United States was an empire from the moment of its creation.

The essays gathered in
The Early Imperial Republic move beyond the question of whether the new republic was an empire, investigating instead where, how, and why it was one. They use the category of empire to situate the early United States in the global context its contemporaries understood, drawing important connections between territorial conquests on the continent and American incursions around the globe. They reveal an early U.S. empire with many different faces, from merchants who sought to profit from the republic’s imperial expansion to Native Americans who opposed or leveraged it, from free Black colonizationists and globe-trotting missionaries to illegal slave traders and anti-imperial social reformers. In tracing these stories, the volume’s contributors bring the study of early U.S. imperialism down to earth, encouraging us to see the exertion of U.S. power on the ground as a process that both drew upon the example of its imperial predecessors and was forced to grapple with their legacies. Taken together, they argue that American empire was never confined to one era but is instead a thread throughout U.S. history.

Contributors:Brooke Bauer, Michael A. Blaakman, Eric Burin, Emily Conroy-Krutz, Kathleen DuVal, Susan Gaunt Stearns, Nicholas Guyatt, Amy S. Greenberg, M. Scott Heerman, Robert Lee, Julia Lewandoski, Margot Minardi, Ousmane Power-Greene, Nakia D. Parker, Tom Smith

Author(s): Michael A. Blaakman, Emily Conroy Krutz, Noelani Arista
Series: Early American Studies
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 347
City: Philadelphia

Cover
Contents
Introduction: Michael A. Blaakman and Emily Conroy-Krutz
Part I. Empires, Nations, and States
Chapter 1. The Indian Boundary Line and the Imperialization of U.S.–Indian Affairs: Robert Lee
Chapter 2. The Sutler’s Empire: Frontier Merchants and Imperial Authority, 1790–1811: Susan Gaunt Stearns
Chapter 3. How Native Nations Survived the Imperial Republic: Kathleen Duval
Chapter 4. Catawba Women and Imperial Land Encroachment: Brooke Bauer
Chapter 5. An Empire of Indian Titles: Private Land Claims in Early American Louisiana, 1803–40: Julia Lewandoski
Chapter 6. “A Slave State in Embryo”: Indian Territory, Native Sovereignty, and the Expansion of Slavery’s Empire: Nakia D. Parker
Part II. Continent and Globe
Chapter 7. American Protestant Missionaries, Native Hawaiian Authority, and Religious Freedom in Hawai‘i, ca. 1827–50: Tom Smith
Chapter 8. “The Colony Must Be Broken Up”: The Liberian Settler “Rebellion” of 1823–24: Eric Burin
Chapter 9. Freedom in Chains: U.S. Empire and the Illegal Slave Trade: M. Scott Heerman
Chapter 10. An Empire of Illusions: Paul Cuffe, Martin Delany, and African American Benevolent Empire Building in Africa: Ousmane K. Power-Greene
Part III. The Ideologies of Empire
Chapter 11. Imperialism and the American Imagination: Nicholas Guyatt
Chapter 12. Pax Americana? The Imperial Ambivalence of American Peace Reformers: Margot Minardi
Chapter 13. Mercenary Ambivalence: Military Violence in Antebellum America’s Wars of Empire: Amy S. Greenberg
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Editors’ Acknowledgments