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The Concept of American Isolationism


# 55478
The Concept of American Isolationism
A look at the practice of American isolationism in the first decades of the 1900s and the affect of this practice on future foreign policies.
2,375 words (approx. 9.5 pages) | 9 sources | MLA | 2003 United States


Paper Summary:

This paper thoroughly explores the policies of American isolationism from World War I into the 1920s. It discusses how this policy was mostly held by Americans who did not want their country to be involved in foreign wars and who wanted America to be isolated from the problems of European nations.

From the Paper:

"In its broadest sense, the term isolationism refers to the period in American history between the end of World War I and into the 1920's when certain American citizens and organizations held the view that America should remain a non-intervention and unilateral nation in regard to involvement in the affairs of Europe, especially pertaining to European wars and related military conflicts. Although isolationism itself "was a rather old concept in American history, it was only within the 20th century that it gained prominence and came under attack by numerous political and social critics" (Powaski 25). However, as individuals and entities, those that advocated isolationism did not want the U.S. to sever itself from the rest of the world, for they did not oppose foreign trade and nor American expansion through what was then known as "Manifest Destiny", a policy begun in the later years of the 19th century. Isolationists, for the most part, were not pacifists either, for "they favored the maintenance of military force and might in order to safeguard American interests and national security" (Cooper 35). One of the main components of the isolationist mind was a deep-seated distrust of Europe, especially when it came to Great Britain, for in essence, the isolationists believed that "America had the capability to help the rest of the world through the build-up of its own prosperity and freedom rather than by political or diplomatic involvement in Europe" (Cooper 37)."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

The Concept of American Isolationism (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 13, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-The-Concept-of-American-Isolationism/55478

MLA Citation:

"The Concept of American Isolationism" 15 January 2012. Web. 13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Essay-The-Concept-of-American-Isolationism/55478>




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Published by:

Mgmleo US
Publisher Since:
May 02, 2001
BA in English and American literature, University of Michigan; Life member of the Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore; PUBLISHING CREDENTIALS: The Atlantic Literary Review (2002); First Knight, Journal of the Irving Society (2002); Kakatiya Journal of English Studies (2002); Monsterzine (2001); Edgar Allan Poe Review (1998); editor for "In All Sincerity. . . Peter Cushing" by Christopher Gullo (2004); lecturer at the 2001 Edgar Allan Poe Conference. Presently at work on "The Theatrical Ancestry of Sir Peter Cushing" and a similar article for Scarlet Street magazine. Published author w/ Bear Manor Media--Lee Van Cleef: Best of the Bad, The Unknown Peter Cushing
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