A fresh, spirited and myth-busting history of the Greater United States and its hidden empire, upending the idea of an anti-imperial America.
Daniel Immerwahr is Bergen Evans Professor in the Humanities at Northwestern University, where he focuses on US and global history. He is the author of How to Hide an Empire- A Short History of the Greater United States, which won the Robert H. Ferrell Prize and was a New York Times' critics best book of the year, and Thinking Small- The United States and the Lure of Community Development, which won the Organization of American Historians' Merle Curti Award. He has written for The New Yorker, Atlantic, n+1, Slate, Dissent, and other publications.
[A] smashing new book… fascinating
*Daily Telegraph*
Lively and fascinating … [Immerwahr] is incapable of writing a dull
page, and he has a real gift for making striking and unusual
connections
*Sunday Telegraph*
To call this standout book a corrective would make it sound earnest
and dutiful, when in fact it is wry, readable and often astonishing
… It’s a testament to Immerwahr’s considerable storytelling skills
that I found myself riveted by his sections on Hoover’s quest for
standardized screw threads, wondering what might happen next. But
beyond its collection of anecdotes and arcana, this humane book
offers something bigger and more profound. How to Hide an Empire
nimbly combines breadth and sweep with fine-grained attention to
detail. The result is a provocative and absorbing history of the
United States — ‘not as it appears in its fantasies, but as it
actually is.’
*New York Times*
There are many histories of American expansionism. How to Hide an
Empire renders them all obsolete. It is brilliantly conceived,
utterly original, and immensely entertaining - simultaneously
vivid, sardonic and deadly serious.
*Andrew J. Bacevich, author of Twilight of the American
Century*
This book changes our understanding of the fundamental character of
the United States as a presence in world history. By focusing on
the processes by which Americans acquired, controlled, and were
affected by territory, Daniel Immerwahr shows that the United
States was not just another “empire,” but was a highly distinctive
one the dimensions of which have been largely ignored.
*David A. Hollinger, Professor Emeritus of History at the
University of California, Berkeley, and author of Protestants
Abroad*
How to Hide an Empire is a breakthrough, for both Daniel Immerwahr
and our collective understanding of America’s role in the world.
His narrative of the rise of our colonial empire outside North
America, and then our surprising pivot from colonization to
globalization after World War II, is enthralling in the telling --
and troubling for anyone pondering our nation’s past and future.
The result is a book for citizens and scholars alike.
*Samuel Moyn, professor of law and history at Yale University*
A deft disquisition on America, and America in the world, with a
raconteur’s touch and keen sense of the absurd
*Spectator*
[A] lively new book… Immerwahr peppers his account with colourful
characters and enjoyable anecdotes… [How to Hide an Empire] throws
light on the histories of everything from the Beatles to Godzilla,
the birth-control pill to the transistor radio
*Economist*
This is an easily readable and vividly written book, filled with
numerous fascinating tales, some well known, but many obscure… [How
to Hide an Empire] illuminate[s] the wider history of both the
United States and its colonies
*BBC History*
How to Hide an Empire…achieves a strong grounding in its sources
material and the wider history of empire studies… [it] is timely
and raises weighty questions on themes of identity and belong that
are all very relevant today
*All About History*
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