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Saving Europe: First World War Relief and American Identity

Autor Tammy M. Proctor
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 apr 2025
"First we crushed our enemy, then saved him from starvation," Walter Cronkite intoned in a 1963 episode of the CBS television series The Twentieth Century. Designed to commemorate the upcoming fiftieth anniversary of US aid to Europe during World War I, the episode explained that the American military had "crushed" other nations in both world wars, a violence described as a necessary corrective in order to subsequently unleash "the spirit of the American people." This humanitarian "spirit" manifested as material relief not only to friend but also to former foe. With only a small commentary on the ingratitude of some recipients, the documentary emphasized for Americans their unique role in global peacekeeping and prosperity, functioning as a global patriarch, bearing both carrots and sticks.Saving Europe offers a transnational history of American aid and intervention in Europe between 1914 and 1924, a period when the US simultaneously tightened its borders and expanded its reach. In that crucial decade after the outbreak of World War I, Americans saw themselves in a novel role as protectors of European cultural heritage and as rescuers of vulnerable populations, making them worthy successors to earlier global powers. Saving Europe shines a light on how the US wielded "soft" power in the interwar period through food, dollars, and reconstruction projects. In case studies of Belgium, France, Austria, Germany, and Poland, it traces the development of American views of their role in the wider world as well as European responses to this intervention, providing valuable context for later US global aid and development regimes after World War II.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780197584361
ISBN-10: 0197584365
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 26 b/w
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Saving Europe offers a fresh perspective on the critical decade following the First World War. It explores the intersection of American humanitarian aid and the changed relationship between the United States and Europe. Tammy M. Proctor skillfully examines the complexities of American identity, relief efforts, and the reconstruction of war-torn nations, providing a nuanced understanding of a transformative period in history that has new relevance given the crisis in Ukraine today.
In her brilliant and insightful book, Tammy M. Proctor explains why Americans endeavoured to save Europe after the First World War. She shines a light on the motivations, misperceptions, and racism that were all part of the American moral responsibility to bring democracy and technocracy to the globe, while drawing much needed attention to the ambiguities and stark contradictions of humanitarianism.
In this innovative social and cultural history, Tammy M. Proctor offers fresh perspectives on American humanitarianism and U.S.-European relations during the First World War era. Her book provides an intimate portrayal of American aid efforts across the European continent, while also tracing the lasting legacies of those ventures. As they relieved and rebuilt Europe, Proctor shows, Americans reforged their own identities, redefining the United States place on the global stage.
In this well-researched study, the leading Great War historian Tammy Proctor uncovers how relatively modest efforts to feed hungry Belgians ballooned into a decade-long flurry of American relief organizing across the varied political landscapes of war-torn Europe. Saving Europe not only brings to life the on-the-ground negotiations of donors, relief volunteers, needy mothers, and other ordinary people trying to make sense of World War Is fallout; it makes a convincing case for how those encounters left important legacies for future US humanitarian aid around the globe.

Notă biografică

Tammy M. Proctor is Distinguished Professor of History at Utah State University and co-editor of the Journal of British Studies. She is the author of Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World War; Civilians in a World at War, 1914-1918; An English Governess in the Great War: The Secret Brussels Diary of Mary Thorp (with Sophie de Schaepdrijver); and Gender & the Great War (co-edited with Susan R. Grayzel).