In Our Image: America's Empire in the PhilippinesThis book is an account of America's imperial experience in the Philippines from 1898 to 1946. Stanley Karnow, author of Vietnam: A History, has now written an enthralling account of an almost forgotten subject: America's imperial experience in the Philippines. Panoramic in scope, profound in its perceptions and compassionate in its human portraits, In Our Image is an exciting, heroic, tragic, colorful and often comic narrative drawn from many hitherto unpublished documents as well as hundreds of interviews with American and Filipino participants. Above all, its brilliant descriptions and analysis of this important chapter in American history holds lessons for the present and future. No other book on the subject is as comprehensive. - Jacket flap. |
From inside the book
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Page 182
... turned politician , he had quit college to work on the railroad , then became a newspaper reporter before embarking as a botanist on government expeditions to Death Valley and Alaska - his exploits includ- ing a daring solo journey down ...
... turned politician , he had quit college to work on the railroad , then became a newspaper reporter before embarking as a botanist on government expeditions to Death Valley and Alaska - his exploits includ- ing a daring solo journey down ...
Page 268
... turned Americans against military solutions . They showed their feelings in the spread of peace and disarmament groups as well as in their acclaim for novelists like Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos , who vividly depicted the ...
... turned Americans against military solutions . They showed their feelings in the spread of peace and disarmament groups as well as in their acclaim for novelists like Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos , who vividly depicted the ...
Page 432
... turning the Philippines into a stable , prosperous , self - confident model of de- mocracy in a developing country , the answer is clearly no . The problems are too difficult , the Filipino sense of nationhood too weak and the time ...
... turning the Philippines into a stable , prosperous , self - confident model of de- mocracy in a developing country , the answer is clearly no . The problems are too difficult , the Filipino sense of nationhood too weak and the time ...
Contents
All in the Family | 3 |
In Search of Spices and Souls | 26 |
The Spanish Bond | 48 |
Copyright | |
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Aguinaldo Ameri Americans and Filipinos Aquino archipelago Asia Bataan Benigno Aquino campaign Catholic Cavite century chief China Chinese civilian colonial commander Communist Congress Corazon Aquino Cory Cuba Democratic despite Dewey early economic election enemy Enrile fight Filipinos foreign governor guerrilla Hukbalahap Huks hundred Imelda independence insurgents islands Japan Japanese José land later Leyte liberal Luzon MacArthur Magellan Magsaysay Malacañang Malacañang palace Manila Bay Manuel Quezon Marcos Marcos's martial law McKinley McKinley's military nationalist native navy Ninoy Ninoy's officers Osmeña Otis Pacific party peasants Philip Philippines pledged political politicians president priests province Quezon City Quirino Ramón Magsaysay Reagan rebels reforms reported Republican Rizal Roosevelt Roxas secretary Senate Sergio Osmeña ships Shultz soldiers soon Spain Spanish sugar Taft Taruc thousand tion told town trade U.S. Army U.S. forces U.S. officials United Vietnam Washington William World World War II wrote York