"Grandin has always been a brilliant historian; now he uses his
detective skills in a book that is absolutely crucial to
understanding our present."-Naomi Klein, author of No Logo
The classic analysis of Latin America's role as proving ground for
imperial US strategies and tactics, now in a thoroughly updated and
revised edition
Greg Grandin, associate professor of Latin American history at New York University, is the author of The Last Colonial Massacre and the award-winning The Blood of Guatemala. A Guggenheim fellow, Grandin has served on the United Nations Truth Commission investigating the Guatemalan civil war and has written for Harper's, The Nation, and The New York Times.
"Fifteen years since its original publication, historian Greg
Grandin has revised and reissued his now classic 2006 book,
Empire's Workshop. Having dedicated the intervening years to
studying US imperial power, Grandin's razor-sharp insight into the
structural contradictions of the US imperialist project make this
work required reading."
--Jacobin "The western hemisphere is in turmoil, facing severe
crises. There could hardly be a more auspicious moment for the
appearance of this highly informed updating of Greg Grandin's
invaluable insights into Latin America and its troubled relations
with the 'colossus of the North.'"
--Noam Chomsky, author of Who Rules the World? "Only reality could
be as captivating and disturbing as Greg Grandin's revelations in
this significant update of his classic Empire's Workshop. Latin
America, he shows, is the leading, bleeding edge of US foreign
policy. Empire's Workshop is truly essential reading."
--Stephen Wertheim, author of Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of
U.S. Global Supremacy "It was in Latin America that the U.S.
government first honed its repertoire of imperial domination, often
in the service of capital's relentless expansion. As Grandin shows,
perhaps the most effective of these weapons is ideological: the
steadfast denial that the U.S. is an empire at all."
--Thea Riofrancos, author of Resource Radicals: From
Petro-Nationalism to Post-Extractivism in Ecuador "Provocative and
lucid, Grandin examines how the United States has used Latin
America as a proving ground for imperial war strategies employed
later elsewhere. This important book deserves a wide audience."
--The Washington Post "Greg Grandin's examination of America's
empire in Latin America provides a critical view--squarely opposing
any notion that the United States has advanced toleration, the rule
of law, or democracy in its imperial realm . . . He addresses
empire in terms of its dominated periphery and makes important
contributions by presenting imperial and domestic policies as
inseparable realms."
--Emily S. Rosenberg, The Chronicle of Higher Education "With its
vivid depiction of neocon militarists, religious evangelicals, and
neoliberal economists coming together, Empire's Workshop offers a
cogent analysis of how past interventions in Latin America provide
the United States with a troubling model for present policy."
--Mother Jones "Read Empire's Workshop and the whole disastrous
Bush adventure in Iraq suddenly appears as the logical continuation
of a century of U.S. interventions in that sad laboratory called
Latin America."
--Ariel Dorfman, The Guardian "Insightful and informative."
--San Francisco Chronicle "Grandin shows how much of Latin America,
which today clearly opposes the domination of Washington, questions
the ability of this superpower to bring prosperity, stability and
democracy to the rest of the world when she was unable to do so in
her own backyard."
--Le Monde "A superb book that clarifies, like few others, the role
of Latin America in Washington's grand design and the importance of
the current uprising against the empire in Venezuela, Bolivia, and
beyond."
--John Pilger, author of The New Rulers of the World "Grandin is
especially good on the odious 'public diplomacy' of Reagan/Bush
I/Bush II, a giant step in the degradation of American
democracy."
--George Scialabba, The Nation "In this incisive study, historian
Greg Grandin sketches the vexed course of U.S. relations with Latin
America . . . This timely book offers an analysis of the
ideological foundations of today's foreign policy consensus and a
cautionary tale about its dark legacy."
--Publishers Weekly "If you want to know why the American
intervention in Iraq has failed, look at the El Salvador of a
quarter-century ago . . . Nixon observed that the U.S. could do
what it wanted in Latin America because his compatriots didn't give
a damn about the place. Grandin's excellent book makes a good case
for caring."
--Kirkus Reviews "Meticulous . . . Greg Grandin's book is a highly
readable and deeply unsettling account of how the strategies,
tactics, and diplomacy that the United States government developed
to deal with the Central American 'crisis' of the 1980s became the
very policies that resulted in the current U.S. involvement in
Iraq."
--The American Historical Review "Grandin convincingly argues that
Latin America served as a crucible in which the ingredients of
current U.S. foreign policy were first blended . . . Grandin's
distinctive contribution lies in documenting Latin America's role
as a staging ground for the rise of militaristic idealists within
the Republican Party . . . Vivid."
--Global Policy Forum
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