
Gordon Stewart
Gordon Stewart is J & M Sweet Professor, History Department, Michigan
State University.
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American Response to Canada Since 1776, The
Gordon Stewart
Canadians long have engaged in in-depth, wide-ranging discussions
about their nation's relations with the United States. On the other
hand, American citizens usually have been satisfied to accept a
series of unexamined myths about their country's unchanging, benign
partnership with the "neighbor to the north". Although such
perceptions of uninterrupted, friendly relations with Canada may
dominate American popular opinion, not to mention discussions in
many
American scholarly and political circles, they should not, according
to Stewart, form the bases for long-term U.S. international
economic,
political, and cultural relations with Canada. Stewart describes and
analyzes the evolution of U.S. policymaking and U.S. policy thinking
toward Canada, from the tense and confrontational post-Revolutionary
years to the signing of the Free Trade Agreement in 1988, to
discover
if there are any permanent characteristics of American policies and
attitudes with respect to Canada. American policymakers were
concerned for much of the period before World War II with Canada's
role in the British empire, often regarded as threatening, or at
least troubling, to developing U.S. hegemony in North America and
even, in the late nineteenth century, to U.S. trade across the
Pacific. A permanent goal of U.S. policymakers was to disengage
Canada from that empire. They also thought that Canada's natural
geographic and economic orientation was southward to the U.S., and
policymakers were critical of Canadian efforts to construct an east-
west economy. The Free Trade Agreement of 1988 which prepared the
way
for north-south lines of economic force, in this context, had been
an
objective of U.S. foreign policy since thefounding of the republic
in
1776. At the same time, however, these deep-seated U.S. goals were
often undermined by domestic lobbies and political factors within
the
U.S., most evidently during the era of high tariffs from the 1860s
to
the 1930s when U.S. tariff policies actually encouraged a separate,
imperially-backed economic and cultural direction in Canada. When
the
dramatic shift toward integration in trade, investment, defense and
even popular culture began to take hold in the 1930s, 1940s and
1950s
in the wake of the Depression and World War II, American
policymakers
viewed themselves as working in harmony with underlying, "natural"
converging economic, political and cultural trends recognized and
accepted by their Canadian counterparts.
232 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", January 1992
Cloth, $38.95,
0870133128 9780870133121

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