Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power
From the author of The Origins of the Korean War, this book “faces West” to focus on the importance of the Pacific Coast in a boldly original reinterpretation of the American ascendency.

America is the first world power to inhabit an immense land mass open at both ends to the world’s two largest oceans—the Atlantic and the Pacific. This gives America a great competitive advantage often overlooked by Atlanticists, whose focus remains overwhelmingly fixed on America’s relationship with Europe. Bruce Cumings challenges the Atlanticist perspective in this innovative new history, arguing that relations with Asia influenced our history greatly.

Cumings chronicles how the movement westward, from the Middle West to the Pacific, has shaped America’s industrial, technological, military, and global rise to power. He unites domestic and international history, international relations, and political economy to demonstrate how technological change and sharp economic growth have created a truly bicoastal national economy that has led the world for more than a century. Cumings emphasizes the importance of American encounters with Mexico, the Philippines, and the nations of East Asia. The result is a wonderfully integrative history that advances a strong argument for a dual approach to American history incorporating both Atlanticist and Pacificist perspectives.
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Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power
From the author of The Origins of the Korean War, this book “faces West” to focus on the importance of the Pacific Coast in a boldly original reinterpretation of the American ascendency.

America is the first world power to inhabit an immense land mass open at both ends to the world’s two largest oceans—the Atlantic and the Pacific. This gives America a great competitive advantage often overlooked by Atlanticists, whose focus remains overwhelmingly fixed on America’s relationship with Europe. Bruce Cumings challenges the Atlanticist perspective in this innovative new history, arguing that relations with Asia influenced our history greatly.

Cumings chronicles how the movement westward, from the Middle West to the Pacific, has shaped America’s industrial, technological, military, and global rise to power. He unites domestic and international history, international relations, and political economy to demonstrate how technological change and sharp economic growth have created a truly bicoastal national economy that has led the world for more than a century. Cumings emphasizes the importance of American encounters with Mexico, the Philippines, and the nations of East Asia. The result is a wonderfully integrative history that advances a strong argument for a dual approach to American history incorporating both Atlanticist and Pacificist perspectives.
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Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power

Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power

by Bruce Cumings
Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power

Dominion from Sea to Sea: Pacific Ascendancy and American Power

by Bruce Cumings

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Overview

From the author of The Origins of the Korean War, this book “faces West” to focus on the importance of the Pacific Coast in a boldly original reinterpretation of the American ascendency.

America is the first world power to inhabit an immense land mass open at both ends to the world’s two largest oceans—the Atlantic and the Pacific. This gives America a great competitive advantage often overlooked by Atlanticists, whose focus remains overwhelmingly fixed on America’s relationship with Europe. Bruce Cumings challenges the Atlanticist perspective in this innovative new history, arguing that relations with Asia influenced our history greatly.

Cumings chronicles how the movement westward, from the Middle West to the Pacific, has shaped America’s industrial, technological, military, and global rise to power. He unites domestic and international history, international relations, and political economy to demonstrate how technological change and sharp economic growth have created a truly bicoastal national economy that has led the world for more than a century. Cumings emphasizes the importance of American encounters with Mexico, the Philippines, and the nations of East Asia. The result is a wonderfully integrative history that advances a strong argument for a dual approach to American history incorporating both Atlanticist and Pacificist perspectives.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780300168006
Publisher: Yale University Press
Publication date: 09/28/2010
Pages: 672
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.60(d)

About the Author

Bruce Cumings is chair of the History Department at the University of Chicago and author of the award-winning book The Origins of the Korean War.

Table of Contents

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xviii

I A Frontier of the Mind

Chapter 1 The Machine in the Garden 3

Chapter 2 "The Remote beyond Compare": Finding California 41

II From Sea to Shining Sea: Manifest Destiny

Chapter 3 A Continent in Five Easy Pieces 55

Chapter 4 Manifest Destiny's Offspring: Gold, the Continental Railroad, Texas 94

Chapter 5 Abroad in Search of Monsters to Destroy 126

III Pacific States, New England Peoples

Chapter 6 East of Eden: The Pacific Northwest 157

Chapter 7 Edens Lush and Frigid 175

Chapter 8 Pacific Crossings: Asians in the New States 197

IV "A Crust of the Earth": Protean California

Chapter 9 A Garden Cornucopia 219

Chapter 10 "There It is. Take it": Water and Power 244

Chapter 11 Southern California: Island on the Pacific 264

V A Tipping Point

Chapter 12 The State as Pretense of Itself: Developing the West 299

Chapter 13 Postwar California and the Rise of Western Republicanism 335

Chapter 14 In California's Shadow: The Rest of the West in the Postwar Era 363

Chapter 15 Archipelago of Empire: An American Grid for the Global Garden 388

Chapter 16 Silicon Valley: A New World at the Edge of the Sea 424

Chapter 17 Conclusion: The American Ascendancy 471

Appendix 501

Notes 515

Bibliography 553

Index 589

What People are Saying About This

Daniel Chirot

Dominion from Sea to Sea is both original and so well researched that I am in awe of all the work and how all that information has been integrated.—Daniel Chirot, University of Washington

Carol Gluck

In a rich and colorful narrative Cumings sweeps the reader westward across time and space, recounting U.S. history from the perspective of the Pacific, with special attention to California on one side and East Asia on the other. From Jurassic trenches to Silicon Valley, he links the westering of people, technology, capitalism, and lifestyles to both domestic and foreign policy and concludes that whatever has happened to California (and hence to the country), America remains ascendant, even if it doesn't always know how to go about its global leadership. Agree or disagree, the story is irresistible.—Carol Gluck, Columbia University

Melvyn Leffler

In this sprawling and vastly interesting book, Bruce Cumings reorients American history from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Stressing America's expansionist thrusts and violent, unilateralist impulses, he illuminates how adventurers and entrepreneurs, state and federal governments, corporations and universities all collaborated to transform the West and revitalize America, especially after the Great Depression of the 1930s and the attack on Pearl Harbor. Rarely has a historian so evocatively and insightfully integrated the settlement of America's frontiers with the history of migration, technology, trade, agriculture, race, the environment, and foreign relations. Dominion from Sea to Sea reshapes and reorients our thinking about our nation's history; it is a book that must be read and discussed; it inspires pride and shame.—Melvyn P. Leffler, University of Virginia

Akira Iriye

In this fascinating book, Bruce Cumings, whose scholarly work has focused on East Asia, shows that he can be just as adept and exciting in writing American history. Actually, it is a 'Pacificist' version of U.S. history. He shows that 'the American story' can never be fully told unless the Western parts of the United States as well as the Pacific region are incorporated. Describing in colorful detail developments in the Western states, including Texas, as well as the countries of East Asia, the author argues that these developments have been inseparable from the story of U.S. 'dominion from sea to sea,' or its overwhelming military presence in 'the global archipelago.' The book fits into an emerging scholarly trend, to transcend narrowly focused national narratives and to deal with larger entities and in large frameworks such as Atlantic history, Europeanization, South Asian cosmopolitanism that have already enriched our understanding of modern global history. Few historians are as capable as Cumings of launching the field of Pacific history, and readers will find in this imaginatively conceived and earnestly but also humorously presented history much that will help them understand how the United States became globalized domestically and internationally, and what the future holds both for the nation and for the world.—Akira Iriye, Harvard University

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