Editor’s Note

IF 0.4 3区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era Pub Date : 2023-06-30 DOI:10.1017/s1537781423000129
Rosanne Currarino
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Abstract

This issue takes on the vast Progressive Era, offering new looks at reform, empire, and citizenship. Daniel Burge reconsiders a staple of Progressive Era history: the oft-repeated claim that the yellow press pushed McKinley, and thus the United States, to war with Spain in 1898. Such assertions, Burge shows, overlook over forty years of newspaper calls to intervene in Cuba, ostensibly to revenge the supposed martyrdom of William Crittendon. Ignoring this long history, Burge argues, overstates the power of the press and minimize Americans’ long-standing appetite for hemispheric empire. Dustin Meier looks at women settlement house workers’ environmental philosophy as they enacted it in summer camp programs for urban children. These camps, designed to give children two weeks of rest and play in nature, were a scathing critique of the industrial city. The polluted and filthy environment exacerbated social and economic inequality while also stunting individual children’s moral growth. Reformers’ environmental agenda show an “intimate connection” between their calls for systemic and individual reform. Progressive women reformers, shows Megan Threlkeld, did not only work close to home, they also turned to foreign policy in their efforts to create a more nearly equal and just society. A wide range of women reformers and reform organizations, including the WCTU, NAWSA, and the NCW, were deeply interested in international arbitration and advocated strongly for an international court of arbitration. Their commitment to that process propelled them into public debates over American foreign policy, including U.S. involvement in the War of 1898 and World War 1. In “Sound Citizenship,” Evan Sullivan examines the U.S. Army Section of Defects of Hearing and Speech’s efforts to rehabilitate soldiers with hearing and speech disabilities after World War I. The U.S. Army classified returning veterans’ disabilities as “defects” and was determined to remove or minimize them. The highly publicized rehabilitation program linked hearing and speaking with full citizenship, thus strongly implying that disabilities, including those acquired through wartime service, were not compatible with being an American citizen. Comparisons between our contemporary global pandemic of COVID-19 and the 1918–1919 influenza pandemic have proliferated since 2020. Some economic historians have noted the lack of significant economic depression in 1918–1919 and suggested that is evidence that Americans were less affected by the early pandemic because they just kept spending money. No, argues Max Ehrenfreund. American spending shows the opposite. Americans understood themselves as consumer citizens, and as such they had a duty to limit consumption to state-defined “essential businesses.” But the state recognized that citizens had a right to enjoy a good standard of living and defined
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Editor’s音符
这期以广阔的进步时代为背景,为改革、帝国和公民身份提供了新的视角。丹尼尔·伯格重新审视了进步时代的一个重要历史:人们经常重复的说法是,黄色媒体推动了麦金利大学,从而推动了美国在1898年与西班牙开战。伯奇指出,这些断言忽视了40多年来报纸呼吁干预古巴事务的呼声,表面上是为了报复威廉·克里坦滕所谓的殉难。伯奇认为,忽视这段悠久的历史,夸大了媒体的力量,并削弱了美国人长期以来对西半球帝国的渴望。达斯汀·迈耶(Dustin Meier)观察了女性安置工人在城市儿童夏令营项目中制定的环境哲学。这些营地旨在让孩子们在大自然中休息和玩耍两周,是对这座工业城市的严厉批评。污染和肮脏的环境加剧了社会和经济的不平等,同时也阻碍了儿童个体的道德成长。改革者的环境议程显示了他们对系统改革和个人改革的呼吁之间的“密切联系”。Megan Threlkeld表示,进步的女性改革者不仅在家附近工作,而且在努力创造一个更接近平等和公正的社会时,她们还转向外交政策。包括WCTU、NAWSA和NCW在内的众多妇女改革者和改革组织对国际仲裁非常感兴趣,并强烈主张建立一个国际仲裁法庭。他们对这一进程的承诺促使他们参与了关于美国外交政策的公开辩论,包括美国参与1898年战争和第一次世界大战。在《健全的公民》一书中,埃文·沙利文考察了美国陆军听力和语言缺陷科在第一次世界大战后为恢复听力和语言残疾的士兵所做的努力。美国陆军将退伍军人的残疾归类为“缺陷”,并决心消除或尽量减少这种残疾。广为宣传的康复计划将听力和语言与完全的公民身份联系在一起,因此强烈暗示残疾,包括战时服役期间获得的残疾,与成为美国公民不相容。自2020年以来,将我们当代的COVID-19全球大流行与1918-1919年的流感大流行进行了大量比较。一些经济历史学家指出,1918年至1919年期间没有出现严重的经济萧条,这表明美国人受早期大流行的影响较小,因为他们一直在花钱。马克思·埃伦弗里德认为,不可能。美国人的消费恰恰相反。美国人认为自己是消费公民,因此他们有责任将消费限制在国家定义的“基本业务”上。但国家承认公民有权利享受良好的生活水平,并规定
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