We talk about living in a global era but the groundwork for it was laid more than a century ago. By the late 19th century Europe Japan and the United States had taken control of most of the world. Travel and trade between home countries and colonies sent goods and technology to even the most remote corners of the globe. An English lady's letter home on smallpox inoculations in Turkey an American missionary's account of the forcible collection of rubber in Belgian Congo and a Chinese official's regulations for European merchants are among the primary sources that Bonnie Smith has assembled to demonstrate the advantages and drawbacks of the new economy. Society education and the environment also underwent massive changes as witnessed by the selection of excerpts from an exam in a German missionary school in Togo and British reports on the devastation of entire forests in Burma. <p/>Imperial growth did not come without a price. A Japanese document outlining governance in Korea and U.S. President Benjamin Harrison's defense of the annexation of Hawaii illustrate the militant nationalism religious intolerance and pseudo-scientific racist theories used to justify the brute force of colonial rule. The colonized nations fought back-a popular Chinese poem in praise of the Boxers' opposition to foreign rule attests to this rebellious spirit and a Moroccan's shock at barbaric European mores illustrates the conquered's view of the conquerors. A picture essay Mixture showcases the amalgamation of global cultures through photographs of buildings furniture advertisements sporting events and sculpture. Bonnie Smith vividly captures the booming expansion of a flawed political system and expertly links the documentary evidence with informed commentary and prefatory essays to each chapter.<br>
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