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Expansionism

About: Expansionism is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 979 publications have been published within this topic receiving 11169 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors argue that these docuseries illustrate Disney's digital corporate strategy as a narrativization of wonderful work and ever-expanding value, and use the careful navigation of corporate legacy and history in the creation and maintenance of what I term brand futurity.
Abstract: The Walt Disney Company has maintained an aggressive approach to brand management for nearly a century. With the acquisition of a number of highly reputable companies, this aggression has become unignorable within the media industry. At the same time, Disney has embraced digital expansionism, culminating with the launch of its own on-demand streaming service, Disney+, in late 2019. The platform’s documentary series offer a unique window into this new era of the Disney empire, usefully demonstrating the careful navigation of corporate legacy and history in the creation and maintenance of what I term brand futurity. Thinking critically about the concept of collective imaginaries in the context of the digital and streaming economies, this article argues that these docuseries illustrate Disney’s digital corporate strategy as a narrativization of wonderful work and ever-expanding value.

1 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored the relationship between President James K. Polk's progressive ambition and the geographic expansion of the United States, particularly with regard to the social and religious foundations for manifest destiny in the public conscience.
Abstract: This article explores the relationship between President James K. Polk’s progressive ambition in the national electorate and the geographic expansion of the United States, particularly with regard to the social and religious foundations for manifest destiny in the public conscience. The author finds that manifest destiny played a central role in President James K. Polk’s successful campaign for the White House as well as his handling of foreign and domestic affairs.

1 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Path of Empire: Panama and the California Gold Rush as discussed by the authors is an innovative transnational history of Panama during the U.S. Gold Rush, and Habits of Empire is a traditional narrative history of American foreign relations published by a trade press.
Abstract: Path of Empire: Panama and the California Gold Rush. By Aims McGuinness. (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2008. Pp. 249. Cloth, $35.00; Paper, $19.95.)Habits of Empire: A History of American Expansion. By Walter Nugent. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2008. Pp. 387. Maps. Cloth, $30.00.)Reviewed by Amy S. GreenbergWhither the course of empire. Thomas Cole transfixed the American art world in the mid 1830s with a series of allegorical paintings that suggested that the course of empire was inexorable, a cyclical decline from the idyllic pastoral state into ruin. The historiography of empire has not followed this neat linear trajectory. Only slowly has empire crept back into the history of the early American republic from the more immediate past. For decades, diplomatic historians treated America's imperialism of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as an unfortunate digression from an otherwise noble history of idealistic settlement-driven expansionism. The idea that antebellum Americans pursued empire was openly rejected by scholars: Didn't the United States incorporate the Spanish, French, British, and Mexican settlers in newly acquired territories into the polity? Weren't politicians and citizens of the period openly disdainful of England's empire? If the United States was imperialist, why didn't it annex all of Mexico when it had the opportunity? Why did it wait until 1898 to annex Hawai'i? Why didn't it grab Cuba in the 1850s?All these questions have answers, and none of them includes altruism on the part of American politicians. Were it not for sectional tensions in the 1850s, the United States would certainly have pursued further territorial acquisitions, and extending full citizenship rights to the peoples of those territories was hardly the only option politicians debated. Indeed the Mexicans of America's new Southwest never enjoyed the full citizenship rights promised them in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.The fact that antebellum America was imperialistic is not only acknowledged but also central to the theses of two recent publications. Path of Empire is an innovative transnational history of Panama during the U.S. Gold Rush, and Habits of Empire is a traditional narrative history of American foreign relations published by a trade press. Vastly different, both adopt a perspective that would have been unthinkable twenty years ago.Aims McGuinness's Path of Empire: Panama and the California Gold Rush is a remarkable first book, a revised University of Michigan dissertation that quite literally approaches an old topic from a new direction. Utilizing a wide array of sources, many unearthed at great pains from archives in Colombia and Panama, McGuinness asks a provocative question: What did the Gold Rush look like from the perspective of Panama? Panama was a key transit route for Gold Rush travelers from the eastern United States, and the site of the first transcontinental railroad, built decades before the Panama Canal. Like other Latin American countries, it was also targeted by filibusters in the 1850s. Thus a very small country took on outsized international significance in the 1850s.Not surprisingly this transformation had profound internal ramifications for Panama. The railroad, which was originally embraced by the ruling elite as a panacea, instead destroyed the local economy by quickly transporting travelers from one coast to another, completely undermining the indigenous transit system. Growing tensions between Panamanians and Americans ultimately exploded in an 1856 incident over a slice of watermelon that left seventeen people dead outside the Panama City railroad station. In Panama the Tajada de Sandia, as it is known, is embraced as a heroic act of resistance against an occupying force. McGuinness uses the incident as a framing device for a complex history in which the meanings of events of international significance were actively contested on both sides of Panama's borders. …

1 citations

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: The history of the United States has mapped an uninterrupted course of expansionism and empire building from its earliest colonial beginnings as the settler-conquerors of indigenous nations through the nineteenth century's adventurism abroad as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: From our earliest colonial beginnings as the settler-conquerors of indigenous nations through the nineteenth century’s adventurism abroad, the history of the United States has mapped an uninterrupted course of expansionism and empire building. As future president and then-governor of New York State, Theodore Roosevelt, declared in April 1899, two months after the Senate ratified the treaty with Spain that concluded the Spanish-American War and effectively established the Philippines as a colony of the United States, his countrymen were “stern men with empire in their brains” (qtd. in Moore 3). Yet despite this entrenched masculinist discourse, one extraordinary woman has also worn the face of empire: the Icelander, Gudrid Thorbjornsdottir, an eager participant in Europe’s first documented colonizing venture in North America and the first European woman known to have borne a child here. Unfortunately, because we have no written record from Gudrid herself, we know her only through the fashionings of others. The how and the why of those many refashionings is the subject of this chapter.

1 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202374
2022172
202126
202038
201928
201835