Cover image for Germany in Central America : Competitive Imperialism, 1821-1929.
Germany in Central America : Competitive Imperialism, 1821-1929.
Title:
Germany in Central America : Competitive Imperialism, 1821-1929.
Author:
Schoonover, Thomas.
ISBN:
9780817384890
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (335 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- PREFACE -- INTRODUCTION -- CHAPTER 1 Foundations of German Interest in Central America, 1820-1848 -- CHAPTER 2 Prussia and Commerce with the Pacific Basin, 1848-1851 -- CHAPTER 3 Franz Hugo Hesse's Mission to Central America, 1851-1858 -- CHAPTER 4 Bismarck and the Foundations of the German Empire, 1858-1871 -- CHAPTER 5 Defining Germany's Role in Central America, 1871-1885 -- CHAPTER 6 Aggressive Participation in the New World, 1885-1898 -- CHAPTER 7 Aggressive Penetration and National Honor, 1898-1906 -- CHAPTER 8 Apogee of German Power in Central America, 1906-1914 -- CHAPTER 9 U.S. Displacement of German Economic Power during World War I -- CHAPTER 10 Reestablishing Germany's Role, 1920-1925 -- CHAPTER 11 A Revived German Presence in Central America, 1924-1929 -- CONCLUSION AND EPILOGUE -- APPENDIX: TABLES -- NOTES -- RESEARCH RESOURCES ON GERMANY IN CENTRAL AMERICA -- PRIMARY MATERIALS AND PUBLISHED SOURCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
Using previously untapped resources including private collections, the records of cultural institutions, and federal and state government archives, Schoonover analyzes the German role in Central American domestic and international relations. Of the four countries most active in independent Central America-Britain, the United States, France, and Germany- historians know the least about the full extent of the involvement of the Germans. German colonial expansion was based on its position as an industrialized state seeking economic well-being and security in a growing world market. German leaders were quick to recognize that ties to the cheap labor of overseas countries could compensate for some of the costs and burdens of conceding material and social privileges to their domestic labor force. The Central American societies possessed limited resource bases; smaller and poorly educated populations; and less capital, communications, and technological development than Germany. They saw the borrowing of development as a key to their social, economic, and political progress. Wary Central American leaders also saw the influx of German industrialists as assurance against excessive U.S. presence in their political economies and cultures. Although the simplistic bargain to trade economic development for cheap labor appeared to succeed in the short term, complex issues of German domestic unemployment and social disorder filtered to Central American countries and added to their own burdens. By 1929, Germany had recovered most of its pre-World War I economic position.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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