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The Invaded : How Latin Americans and Their Allies Fought and Ended U. S. Occupations
The Invaded : How Latin Americans and Their Allies Fought and Ended U. S. Occupations
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Author(s): McPherson, Alan
ISBN No.: 9780190498764
Pages: 416
Year: 201609
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 63.47
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"The research for The Invaded is impressive in scope and depth.[McPherson] mined [archives, oral history collections, and various primary and seconday] sources for information, participant anecdotes, and colorful perspectives.This book will enlighten scholars and students looking to understand US involvement in the Caribbean area."--T. Schoonover, Hispanic American Historical Review "Successive generations of scholars from different fields have written on the U.S. interventions and occupation in the Caribbean and Central America in the heyday of U.S.


empire in the early twentieth century. Alan McPherson''s contribution to this genre stands far above the rest. Using a broad array of sources, McPherson has given us a model study of three occupations from the era, in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua, and brings to center stage the story of the motives, makeup, and successes of who resisted these occupations."--Lester D. Langley, author of The Banana Wars: United States Intervention in the Caribbean, 1898-1934 "The Invaded offers a careful, sophisticated, and relevant analysis of American occupation efforts in the Western Hemisphere during the first half of the twentieth century. Alan McPherson shows that native resistance aimed at preserving independence undermined American ambitions, forcing the withdrawal of U.S. soldiers.


This is a book that everyone interested in modern warfare, diplomacy, and counterinsurgency should read. Twenty-first century American experiences in the Middle East echo this compelling history of Latin America a century earlier."--Jeremi Suri, author of ''Libertys Surest Guardian: American Nation-Building from the Founders to Obama "Alan McPherson''s outstanding new book does much more than chart the sweeping impact of the major U.S. occupations in the Caribbean. It also does more than remind us vividly and in greater detail of some of what we already knew about the conduct of those occupations.McPherson''s book is not merely a breathtaking compendium of evidence about the sordid nature of the occupations drawn from sources from five countries in three languages. It also benefits from his rare ability to engage in historical comparison through multinational research and deep knowledge of more than one country.


"--Max Paul Friedman, ReVista "For this reviewer, The Invaded was an eye opener, and forecasts much of what has happened in the world since that time. The book is highly recommended for people who are examining geopolitical events now and in the twentieth century, and who hope that the past does not predict the future. Latin Americanists, particularly those hailing from the U.S., would do well to at least understand the contours of the many political geographies seen through the critical lens that McPherson casts. Readers will take away lessons that can challenge any reincarnation of a newly spun Monroe Doctrine in the new millennium."--Journal of Latin American Geography "[A]n important contribution to the limited historiography on U.S.


occupations."--The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society "Timely and indispensable.As most studies of occupations by definition focus on the occupier, McPherson refreshingly tells much of the story through the ''eyes of the invaded.The Invaded shows the reader how new technologies and media allowed guerrilla foes to fight back in the court of public opinion. McPherson believes these American occupations and the propaganda campaigns of the invaded sparked international solidarity movements that were as central to the struggle as the armed insurgents themselves."--The American Interest "Like the best international histories, McPherson mines an impressive array of sources to chart endogenous and exogenous factors that influenced the arc and scope of the occupations. He convincingly proves that in each case the intervention proved costly in human and fiscal terms, and that each failed in its efforts to bring about what we today call ''regime change,'' in part because the Marines and diplomats were not infrequently at cross purposes."--American Historical Review "Alan McPherson has produced a unique contribution to the literature on U.


S. Latin American relations. Viewing this work in relationship to his previous scholarship, it is easy to conclude that he has become the foremost young scholar in the field.This book should be required reading for any policymaker, U.S. or other, contemplating military intervention and occupation, and that is high praise indeed."--H-Diplo Roundtable.


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