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About this book
Generations of historians have maintained that in the last decade of the nineteenth century white-supremacist racial ideologies such as Anglo-Saxonism, social Darwinism, benevolent assimilation, and the concept of the “white man’s burden” drove American imperialist ventures in the nonwhite world. In Race over Empire, Eric T. L. Love contests this view and argues that racism had nearly the opposite effect.
From President Grant’s attempt to acquire the Dominican Republic in 1870 to the annexations of Hawaii and the Philippines in 1898, Love demonstrates that the imperialists' relationship with the racist ideologies of the era was antagonistic, not harmonious. In a period marked by Jim Crow, lynching, Chinese exclusion, and immigration restriction, Love argues, no pragmatic politician wanted to place nonwhites at the center of an already controversial project by invoking the concept of the “white man’s burden.” Furthermore, convictions that defined “whiteness” raised great obstacles to imperialist ambitions, particularly when expansionists entered the tropical zone. In lands thought to be too hot for “white blood,” white Americans could never be the main beneficiaries of empire.
What emerges from Love’s analysis is a critical reinterpretation of the complex interactions between politics, race, labor, immigration, and foreign relations at the dawn of the American century.
From President Grant’s attempt to acquire the Dominican Republic in 1870 to the annexations of Hawaii and the Philippines in 1898, Love demonstrates that the imperialists' relationship with the racist ideologies of the era was antagonistic, not harmonious. In a period marked by Jim Crow, lynching, Chinese exclusion, and immigration restriction, Love argues, no pragmatic politician wanted to place nonwhites at the center of an already controversial project by invoking the concept of the “white man’s burden.” Furthermore, convictions that defined “whiteness” raised great obstacles to imperialist ambitions, particularly when expansionists entered the tropical zone. In lands thought to be too hot for “white blood,” white Americans could never be the main beneficiaries of empire.
What emerges from Love’s analysis is a critical reinterpretation of the complex interactions between politics, race, labor, immigration, and foreign relations at the dawn of the American century.
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Chapter One: American Imperialism and the Racial Mountain
Race is and will remain a vital part of the story of American imperialism. That it loomed large in the minds of policymakers, that it was a potent force in nation building, policy formation, and expansionism, has been demonstrated repeatedly and convincingly in the historical literature. In answer to the question at the center of this bookâhow did race move, shape, and even perhaps inspire late-nineteenth-century U.S. imperialism?âthere is a remarkable level of consensus among historians, who assert that racial ideologies rooted in white supremacy gave expansionists a grand and compelling rational for empire. Anglo-Saxonism, social Darwinism, benevolent assimilation, and the âwhite manâs burdenââalmost unassailable elaborations of white supremacyâjustified the annexations that followed the war with Spain in 1898, brought millions of people of color under the jurisdiction of the United States, and helped to elevate the nation to the status of a world power. The pages that follow challenge this convention; they begin with a critical review of the literature. While the reigning narrative on race and empire has recovered significant aspects of the past, it has also been fettered by clearly identifiable and long-standing problems. Put another way (borrowing Langston Hughesâs most elegant metaphor), it can be said that a racial mountain stands between historians and an accurate accounting of race, racism, and late-nineteenth-century American imperialism.
The conventional narrative can be summarized briefly.1 In the three decades following the Civil War, an expansionist, market-oriented foreign policy evolved that gave Americaâs global affairs renewed logic, coherence, motive, and direction. The search for markets, for dependable outlets for the nationâs massive and growing agricultural and industrial production, advanced with each passing year. It was a restless, aggressive movement, infused with a peculiar urgency by the cycle of economic growth and collapse that occurred in every decade between 1870 and World War I. Leading economic theorists of the era believed the cause of the recurrent booms and busts was âoverproduction.â American capitalism suffered, they said, because it had become too efficient, too productive. Ironically, it had become too successful for its own good. Inventing, assembling, building, sowing, and reaping more than domestic markets could absorb destabilized the economy, drove tens of thousands of businesses into bankruptcy and millions of workers out of jobs, and fed what was, by the standards of the time, a species of social malaise of the most fearful kind. Farmers and the urban working classes turned to political radicalism: toward insurgent populism, unionism, socialism, public demonstrations, and protests that all too frequently exploded into violent (and occasionally murderous) confrontations with capital. The solution to overproduction and the attendant social chaos, theorists said, was to find and open new markets abroad where the excess production could be sold off, profitably. This would lift the economy, employment, and wages and suppress political and class tensions. It was a beguiling stratagem embraced by a mass of followers: agrarians and industrialists, social theorists and economists, public intellectuals, missionaries, military men, and others, all of whom subscribed to a common vision of natural greatness whose prerequisite was empire. As this outward advance brought the United States into contact with nations thickly populated with polymorphous, dark-skinned peoplesâliterally millions of individuals consigned by science, theology, sentiment, prejudice, history and tradition to a class of inferior racesâthese accounts maintain that at home white supremacist ideas saturated the culture, dissolved the class, sectional, religious, and ethnic divisions among whites, and unified that race.
In this interpretation, white supremacy became an indispensable feature of the imperial project. Nell Irvin Painter, for example, wrote that â[i]n justification for empire, Anglo-Saxonism combined variously with arguments for Anglo-American identity, the white manâs burden, manifest and ordinary destiny, and duty.â Painter went on to say that imperialism ârose above politics and laws because within the unity that was human history, Americans [believed that they] were playing a pre-ordained role. Imperialism,â she insisted, âwas elemental, racial, predestined.â Alan Dawley stated that racial nationalism fueled the outward thrust and cited as evidence statements by the Reverend Josiah Strong (âStrong expanded Manifest Destiny from continental to global dimensions, writing of âthe final competition of racesââ) and Senator Albert Beveridge regarding the duty of English-speaking nations to govern âsavages and senile peoples.â2
Though Michael H. Hunt maintained that race âserved equally as a reason for a cautious self-limiting policy and as justification for a bold, assertive one,â he concluded that in the final account, race ideology favored imperialism. âHad the issue of [annexing Hawaii and the Philippines] been resolved on the basis of racial arguments alone,â Hunt wrote, âthe opposition might well have stymied the McKinley administration.â Annexation triumphed in 1898 in large part, he said, because the imperialists âcould play more directly on Anglo-Saxon prideâ than those who opposed expansionist policies on racial grounds. Charles S. Campbell agreed that race ideologyâs effect on imperial policy was ambiguous: âit led to a belief in the righteousness of annexing supposedly inferior people,â he observed, âbut it led also to a disinclination to annex them, out of fear that the superior [racial] stock would be depreciated.â Like Hunt, Campbell, in the final account, set his ambivalence aside and declared: âwhereas racism was a deterrent [to territorial imperialism] in the 1870s, it was not in the 1890s. On balance,â he concluded, âthe belief in Anglo-Saxon supremacy encouraged territorial expansion at the end of the century.â3
Within this body of work, historians drew a direct connection between empire and the rise of a rigid, often brutal domestic racial social order: what Rayford Logan famously called âthe nadirâ of the African American experience and American race relations. According to Joseph Fry, in the years after the Civil War, social Darwinism âprovided an ostensibly scientific rationaleâ for racial oppression at home and imperialist aggression abroad. Emily Rosenberg concurred. In the 1890s, she wrote, â[c]oncepts of racial mission, so well rehearsed at home, were easily transferred overseas.â Many scholars were persuaded. Especially influential were observations that historian C. Vann Woodward put forth in both Origins of the New South and The Strange Career of Jim Crow, where he explained that by 1898 â[t]he North had taken up the White Manâs Burdenâ and âwas looking to southern racial policy for national guidance in the new problems of imperialism resulting from the Spanish war.â Woodward pushed his assertion further, declaring that the imperialists modeled their policies not just on ideas borrowed from the old Confederacy but also on the actual framework and structures of the Southâs antiblack social order. âThe Mississippi Plan,â he explained, âhad become the American way.â4
Though they pursue a diversity of subjects, some of the most important recent works on the cultures of U.S. imperialism have embraced the prevailing narrative on race and empire and have taken its conclusions and implications as points of departure, reference, and authority. In Black Americans and the White Manâs Burden, for example, Willard Gatewood conscripts Woodwardâs observation (âthe nationâs embrace of an imperialistic policy played an important role in transforming the âMississippi planâ of race relations into the American Wayâ) as a framework for his study of African Americansâ responses to and role in the quest for empire. In All the Worldâs a Fair, Robert Rydell proceeds from this interpretation when he states that the âvision of the New South manifested at the southern fairs was ⊠a powerful explanatory ideology that shaped the national and world outlook of untold numbers of ⊠Americans.â Expositions that took place in 1898 and after, spectacles âconcomitant to empire,â argues Rydell, served mainly to reaffirm familiar racial prejudices and justify what were, after the war with Spain, established policies: the âwhite manâs burdenâ transformed into âknowledgeâ and entertainment.5 In Barbarian Virtues, a study of the United States and its encounters with foreign peoples at home and abroad in the age of empire, Matthew Frye Jacobson uses a diversity of cultural sources to retell, in new but essentially familiar terms, the standard narrative of an imperial process, including the interactions between the domestic racial social order and expansion abroad. In this account, empire is still justified by convictions of white supremacy and rationalized by the âwhite manâs burden.â6 Kevin K. Gaines used the dominant narrative as a point of departure in his study of the African American intellectual Pauline Hopkins, who, he argues persuasively, used the new imperialism to invent subversive antiracist discourses. 7 Besides the fact that still more scholarsâRubin Weston in Racism in U.S. Imperialism and Kristen Hoganson in Fighting for American Manhood, to give two more examplesâhave cited this narrative in perfunctory ways in their books, popular and highly regarded college textbooks continue to disseminate the narrative, a clear yet peculiar indication of the great authority the prevailing interpretation of race and empire retains through continued (yet largely uncritical) repetition and manipulation.8
Over time, then, a consensus has hardened around this interpretation. Evidence that it has shaped the critical dimensions of more recent scholarship indicates not only that it remains viable and popular but also that it might become part of a renewal of the study of late-nineteenth-century American foreign relations. In an essay on the state of the field, Edward Crapol wrote that diplomatic history could be revitalized if historians conquered their fear of the word âimperialismâ and engaged the period using a conceptual framework âcomparative in design and free of [the] ethnocentric and exceptional biasâ that fettered past works. Such an approach, he explained, would integrate the methods of social history as well as findings drawn from newer works on racism and colonialism. This would begin the work of advancing the history of American foreign relations and rescue it from critics who have dismissed it as âa languishing intellectual backwater.â Significantly, Crapol gave race only a passing mention in his essay (on the last page of a twenty-four-page article) and cited scholarship at the center of the conventional narrative as a model for future research.9 For its general observations on imperial history, this essay deserves close attention, but on the specific matter of race and empire it suggests that the next stage of scholarship follow a model that is highly problematic.
Several aspects of the literature on race and late-nineteenth-century imperialism deserve reconsideration. Let us begin with the problems that arise from the analytic concept most favored by the conventional narrative: racial ideology. The term refers to the ascendance of white supremacist ideasâthe conviction that people of European descent were inherently different from and universally superior to Native Americans, Mexicans, African Americans, Asians, and even certain European groups (in particular the so-called new immigrants, arrivals from the southern and eastern regions of the Continent who poured into the United States in this period). White supremacy benefited from the rise of pseudosciences that were alleged to provide both objective and quantifiable proof of the Anglo-Saxonâs moral and intellectual superiority.
The first problem with racial ideology, already mentioned, is its ambivalence. However powerful and ubiquitous, the dominant racial ideas of the period provided no clear direction in foreign affairs, nor did they propose a program of action toward empire. Campbell, Hunt, Walter LaFeber, and others understood this. They conceded the point that white supremacist ideas could be mobilized equally well both for and against imperialism.10 Therefore, the conclusion that they share, that race ideology facilitated the annexations of 1898, appears to be based less on argument and evidence than on a teleological assumption: that since the fierce resurgence of political and economic disfranchisement and lynching based on race coincided with the United States extending its domination over millions of people of color, the two must be connectedâconnected specifically in such a way that the former advanced the latter.
On the surface this is a compelling thesis, but it quickly comes up against serious difficulty. Historians who support this version of events have relied too much on generalizationâFry, Rosenberg, and Woodward, for exampleâand a small number of favored, often-repeated, and ambiguous sources and quotes. Josiah Strong, who had no direct say in policy formation and questionable influence on the larger culture, is one example. A second would be nearly every statement found in the conventional narrative that is attributed to Senator Albert Beveridge. Beveridge did not enter the Senate until 1899, weeks after that body ratified the treaty that brought the Philippines to the United States and months after Hawaiiâs annexation. Beveridgeâs words, then, are best understood yet almost never presented as ex post facto justifications, not as statements that had any substantive bearing on the making of imperial policy. Rudyard Kipling, author of the poem âThe White Manâs Burden,â a third example, is perhaps the most misused. Many who call the poem into evidence, citing it as a classic exhortation to empire, ignore the fact that it appeared in McClureâs Magazine in February 1899âafter, not before, the United States seized its empire. Most also ignore the poemâs churning irony and cynicism; its references to the contradictions of this crusade (âTake up the White Manâs burden / The savage wars for peace / Fill full the mouth of Famine / and bid the sickness ceaseâ), the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (war, famine, pestilence, and, by implication, death), and the seven deadly sins. The poem ends with a dark prophecy of the fate of imperialists, who would to Kiplingâs reckoning be reduced to servility, exile, and the cold judgment of their countrymen. This was hardly an appeal to the glories of empire.
The second problem of racial ideology as an analytic concept has to do with historical explanation. In Manifest Destiny and Mission in American History, Frederick Merk observed that until the late 1890s, race had acted as a powerful barrier to territorial acquisition.11 There is little dispute over this point: it helps explain, for example, why the United States did not seize even more of Mexico in 1848; why it limited its acquisitions to Texas, an independent republic governed by whites, and the northern provinces where few native Mexicans lived; and why it stayed away from the more torrid and densely populated southern regions. No study so far, however, has presented a persuasive, evidence-based account demonstrating what factor or combination of factors reversed this pattern so suddenly and dramatically in 1898. The literature cites missionary impulses, market demands, and strategic necessity, but no one has shown how these parallel movements uprooted racist laws, structures, and institutions and overturned centuries of accumulated racial thought, then redirected them at the point where they intersected with the nationâs expansionist traditions. The social Darwinists, whose literary and intellectual output is supposed to have turned the public mind and ushered in this change, on reexamination, hardly seem capable of such a feat.12 Nor were the missionaries, whose labors in this regard were ambiguous, at best. Many did feel a strong and perhaps overwhelming sense of Christian duty and charity toward the races that had come into the American fold in 1898, especially the inhabitants of its Pacific acquisitions. But the Philippines were already an outpost of Christianity in East Asia; most of the Filipinos were Catholic, having been converted by the Spanish three hundred years earlier.13 American missionaries had been active in Hawaii only since 1820, but as later chapters will show, their various writingsâbooks, articles, pamphlets, and lettersâprobably did more to damage than support the expansionist cause, particularly on matters of and contiguous to race.
With regard to historical explanation, racial ideology fails to describe the course of policy formation as well as the behavior of the imperialists. Between 1865 and 1900 the United States tried to acquire Alaska, the Midway Islands, the Dominican Republic, Hawaii, the Philippines, Guam, and Puerto Rico. Until 1898, even though the prerequisite racial ideology existed, every attempt it made to purchase or annex territories populated by significant numbers of nonwhite peoples failed.14 Race was central to each incident: the vital optic for nearly every participant and witness. Though both sides in the debates over empire shared an unshakable faith in white supremacy in each episode race ideas were used most openly, aggressively, and effectively by the enemies of imperialism. (Both pro- and anti-imperialists, Christopher Lasch explained, âsaw the world from a pseudo-Darwinian point of view. They accepted the inequality of manâor, to be more precise, of racesâas an established fact of life. They did not question the idea that Anglo-Saxons were superior to other people, and some of them would even have agreed that they were destined eventually to conquer the world.â)15 More significant, in each instance, while policies were being formulated and treaties were in Congress and before the public, the imperialists worked deliberately to avoid race. Put simply, references to social Darwinism, Anglo-Saxonism, benevolent assimilation, and the âwhite manâs burdenââlanguage on which the dominant narrative dependsâdo not appear at the center of the expansionistsâ discourse. As later chapters show, their silences were conspicuous and revealing, and the reasons for them can be easily discerned.
Specific issues of race trouble the prevailing interpretation. One rises out of its treatment of African Americans, who are typically portrayed as the archetypal victim of resurgent racism both at home and abroad. At a time when the term was appropriate, John Hope Franklin called the annexations of 1898 âAmericaâs Negro Empire.â It was a profound insight at the time it was written and remains so, I think, because of, not despite, the dated racial reference.16 Franklin accomplished two things here: he captured the mentalitĂ© of the majority of Americans who, to comprehend the awesome consequences of the war and its aftermath, lumped the inhabitants of the new possessions living in two oceans and set thousands of miles apart into categories of âNegroâ and âblack,â a species of humanity they believed they knew well and understood thoroughly. Franklin also anticipated a narrative strategy, embraced by many historians, in which African Americans act as the conceptual bridge connecting domestic racial oppression and the domination of millions of people of color abroad. Franklin and Woodward had made much the same point with slightly different language: that the Southâs an...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Race over Empire: Racism and U.S. Imperialism, 1865-1900
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Preface
- Chapter One: American Imperialism and the Racial Mountain
- Chapter Two: Santo Domingo
- Chapter Three: The Policy of Last Resort
- Chapter Four: Hawaii Annexed
- Chapter Five: The Philippines
- Epilogue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index