American History Too!

Pulling back the curtain on all the great debates and controversies of American History.

http://recordedhistory.net/american-history-too

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Episode 7 - Teddy Roosevelt


On the seventh podcast of American History Too! we turn our attention to the most cuddily of

all US Presidents – Theodore ‘Teddy’ Roosevelt.  We pull apart ‘T.R.’s’ legacy in the context

of American imperialism abroad and the rise of progressivism at home.  Malcolm argues that Roosevelt is a shining

example of why nuance is required when we discuss historical figures, while

Mark discusses the legitimacy of Roosevelt’s place on Mt. Rushmore alongside

Washington, Jefferson, and Lincoln.  What

legacy can we ascribe arguably the first modern president?  We give you our views but it’s left up to you

to decide.

Finally, find out the truth behind the ‘Teddy Bear’ story

and also how T.R. actually felt about the nickname!

We’ll be back in a couple of weeks when we’ll hopefully be joined

by another special guest to discuss the 1930s. 

Until then, thanks again for listening!

Mark and Malcolm 

 

Reading List:

-         

Michael Cullinane, ‘Imperial “Character”: How

Race and Civilization Shaped Theodore Roosevelt’s Imperialism,’ America’s Transatlantic Turn: Theodore

Roosevelt and the ‘Discovery’ of Europe, eds. Hans Krabbendam and John M.

Thompson (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).

-         

Kathleen M. Dalton, ‘Theodore Roosevelt’s

Contradictory Legacies:  From Imperialist

Nationalism to Advocacy of a Progressive Welfare State,’ A Companion to Theodore Roosevelt, ed. Serge Ricard

(Wiley-Blackwell, 2011)

-         

Peter G. Filene, “An Obituary for ‘The

Progressive Movement’,” American Quarterly

22 (1970), 20-34

-         

Fabian Hilfrich, Debating American Exceptionalism: Empire and Democracy in the Wake of

the Spanish-American War (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), Chp.2.

Also see Ken Burns’ excellent recent documentary series The Roosevelts: An Intimate History (2014)

Our Holiday Reading recommendations

-         

W. Bernard Carlson, Tesla: Inventor of the electrical age (2013)

-         

Eric Schlosser, Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the

Illusion of Safety (2013)

-         

Gary Younge, No

place like home: A black Briton journeys through the American South (2000)

-         

Raymond Arsenault, Freedom Riders: 1961 and the Struggle for Racial Justice (2007)

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 January 17, 2015  42m