A simple question lurks amid the considerable controversy created by recent U.S. policy: what road did Americans travel to reach their current global preeminence? Taking the long historical view, Michael Hunt demonstrates that wealth, confidence, and leadership were key elements to America’s ascent. In an analytic narrative that illuminates the past rather than indulges in political triumphalism, he provides crucial insights into the country’s problematic place in the world today. Hunt charts America’s rise to global power from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries to a culminating multilayered dominance achieved in the mid-twentieth century that has led to unanticipated constraints and perplexities over the last several decades. Themes that figure prominently in his account include the rise of the American state and a nationalist ideology and the domestic effects and international spread of consumer society. He examines how the United States remade great power relations, fashioned limits for the third world, and shaped our current international economic and cultural order. Hunt concludes by addressing current issues, such as how durable American power really is and what options remain for America’s future. His provocative exploration will engage anyone concerned about the fate of our republic. “This engaging history of the United States' rise to global dominance explains how a weak and peripheral New World republic turned itself into the preeminent power of the twentieth century.” — Foreign Affairs “A masterly overview of America’s rise to its current status. . . . Given this outstanding book’s breadth — both its temporal scope and the issues covered — a brief review cannot do it justice.” — Journal of American History “Hunt writes with clarity and verve. . . . [This] should be on the desk of every candidate for national office.” — American Historical Review “A provocative book. . . . An impressively argued interpretation.” — The International History Review “Provides crucial insights into the nation’s controversial role in the world today and prospects for the durability of U.S. power.” — Carolina Arts & Sciences “Compact but still reasonably detailed as well as illuminating. . . . Traces the broad lines of the national experience placing them with knowledge and balance within the context of global transformations.” — Ricerche di Storia Politica “Hunt is a serious scholar, and there is much to learn from and about his explanation of America’s ascendancy. . . . [A] sound study.” — MetroMagazine “Broadly conceived, beautifully organized, lucidly written, and richly documented. . . . Essential.” — CHOICE “This book is a marvel of research (the annotated bibliography itself is worth the price) and just plain thoughtfulness. . . . Michael Hunt has produced a study that both traditionalists and new diplomatic historians ― as well as the public, including politicians ― should read, and read again. . . . Students of American history will, I expect, look to this book as a standard of sweeping interpretation and information that surpasses all before it.” ― Thomas W. Zeiler, #H-Diplo Roundtable Reviews# “Displays an impressive command of the historical literature, an ability to tackle important contemporary questions, and a capacity to make connections about disparate problems in American history. . . . Hunt’s informed review of how the U.S. reached its present dilemma will provide a much-needed historical perspective. Policy makers would do well to ponder this sobering record of how a national search for ascendancy can produce as many intractable problems as it solves.” — Register of the Kentucky Historical Society Michael Hunt does not disappoint. He has written a stimulating overview of what was once called America's 'rise to power,' and he has done so by structuring his account around a set of themes and propositions rather than simple chronology. The book is everywhere enlivened by the author's active engagement in original research and his skillful tapping of the latest scholarship. He moves easily and fluidly through a complex set of historical events taking place over a very long period of time with a gracefulness very few historians achieve.--Marilyn Young, New York University The 21st-century United States through the lens of global history Michael H. Hunt is Everett H. Emerson Professor of History Emeritus at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is author of nine previous books, including The World Transformed: 1945 to the Present ; Lyndon Johnson’s War: America’s Cold War Crusade in Vietnam, 1945–1968 ; and Ideology and U.S. Foreign Policy . Used Book in Good Condition