Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 265
Trim: 6¼ x 9
978-0-8420-5047-0 • Paperback • November 2001 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
978-0-7425-7115-0 • eBook • November 2001 • $46.50 • (£36.00)
Lester D. Langley is the author of numerous books about the relationship of the United States with Latin America and the Caribbean. He also serves as general editor of the University of Georgia Press Series, "The United States and the Americas."
Part 1 I The Cuban Experience
Chapter 2 Leonard Wood and the White Man's Burden
Chapter 3 TR and the Use of Force
Chapter 4 The Second Cuban Intervention, 1906
Chapter 5 Cuba Occupied
Part 6 II Teach them to Elect Good Men
Chapter 7 The Nicaraguan Menace
Chapter 8 The Nicaraguan War, 1910–1912
Chapter 9 The Mexican Crisis
Chapter 10 Veracruz
Chapter 11 The Rulers of Veracruz
Part 12 III Civilizing the Tropics
Chapter 13 Turbulent Hispaniola
Chapter 14 The Pacification of Hispaniola: 1
Chapter 15 The Pacification of Hispaniola: 2
Part 16 IV The Last Banana War
Chapter 17 Interregnum, 1921–1925
Chapter 18 The Second Nicaraguan Civil War, 1925–1927
Chapter 19 The Sandino Chase
Chapter 20 The Last Banana War
We are bombarded today by ill-founded polemics written by instant specialists on the Central American Caribbean areas, and—perhaps needlessly—I would stress that Langley's work is careful and it is fair. It will make the handiest of supplemental readings.
— Hispanic American Historical Review
Recounting the history of the American 'empire' in the Caribbean Basin, the author stresses that the United States failed not so much because of the use of force (the whoe undertaking was rather reluctant at best), but because of cultural and psychological realities.
— Foreign Affairs
Brings a sharper focus to the military's role in U.S. foreign policy in the early twentieth century.
— Military Review
This book not only provides a pithy review of American intentions and heavy-handedness, it explains how a failed interventionist policy led to our propensity to back national dictators who promised to maintain order and respect for American lives and property. The United States did not fail because it suffered from indecisiveness or a lack or ardor, but because it could not effectively rule such conquered places.
— Foreign Service Journal
A well-researched survey of U.S. diplomatic and military intervention in Mexico, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and NIcaragua between 1900 and 1934. . . . Langley's volume is a much-needed work on this area.
— Choice Reviews
In The Banana Wars, Lester D. Langley examines the activities of the U.S. armed forces in the Caribbean between 1900 and 1934. Liberally sprinkled with anecdotes and colorful details, the narrative is readable . . . and the book gives a lively sense of who its actors were and what they did.
— American Historical Review
The Banana Wars is not only good history, it is also a document of some significance. It introduces into the body of liberal historiography an analysis of American hegemony in the Caribbean derived from a framework of imperialism. Langley moves the issue of American imperialism beyond the realm of the problematical and polemical to a place of prominence in mainstream literature.
— Pacific Historical Review