The United States and the Revolutions of 1848

Timothy M. Roberts; Daniel W. Howe · 2002

Abstract In 1848, most Americans did not believe their own country needed the kind of revolution Continental Europe was having.

Tür:
Kitap Bölümü
Yazar:
Timothy M. Roberts; Daniel W. Howe
Yayın yılı:
2002
Yayıncı:
Oxford University Press

Abstract In 1848, most Americans did not believe their own country needed the kind of revolution Continental Europe was having. Their reactions to the revolutions nevertheless reveal much about their own society, their political culture, and their prejudices. This chapter looks at the way people in the United States responded to the European revolutions of 1848. It seeks to take account not only of diplomatic history but also of American domestic politics, social structure, and legal institutions. It is also an examination of American public opinion. The United States had a paradoxical relationship to the revolutions of 1848. On one hand, the nation had been born out of a revolution, and it disposed them to welcome the European revolutions in 1848. On the other hand, the issues involved in the European revolutions did not seem to be live political issues in the United States.

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Abstract In 1848, most Americans did not believe their own country needed the kind of revolution Continental Europe was having.
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Timothy M. Roberts; Daniel W. Howe