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Crucible of Empire: Spanish American War [DVD] [2007] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]
 
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Crucible of Empire: Spanish American War [DVD] [2007] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]

Daniel A. Miller    DVD


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Region 1 encoding (requires a North American or multi-region DVD player and NTSC compatible TV. More about DVD formats.)

Note: you may purchase only one copy of this product. New Region 1 DVDs are dispatched from the USA or Canada and you may be required to pay import duties and taxes on them (click here for details). Please expect a delivery time of 5-7 days.


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Amazon.com:  6 reviews
13 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Depends on the audience . . . 20 Nov 2008
By phulana - Published on Amazon.com
If history is your thing and you want a complete discussion of the Spanish American war--from media tactics to paternalistic foreign policy to military leaders--then by all means, get this video! It's all there!

If, however, you are a high school history teacher like me, and you are thinking of using this with 16 yr olds, just be careful! The "narrative" jumps back and forth between Cuba and the Philippines (even with lots of teacher guidance this confuses kids). But the biggest drawback is the complete lack of narrative suspense and drama.

Great history, but can turn into a painful classroom experience. (And it's loooooooong!)
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Great intro to America's first imperialistic war 7 Aug 2008
By Jean E. Pouliot - Published on Amazon.com
What I know about the Spanish American War can be rattled off in about a minute -- Remember the Maine! Rough Riders, Guam, Cuba, Puerto Rico and he Philippines. This marvelous PBS presentation begins to fill in the rest. Using interviews with historians (including Stephen Ambrose and Daniel Brinkley) from America, Cuba and the Philippines, interspersed with period sheet music ("We have remembered the Maine, The Admiral Dewey March) and archival footage, "Crucible of Empire" tells the tale of a young and brash post-Civil War America ready to flex its adolescent muscle against a weak opponent. The great characters are here -- Teddy Roosevelt, William McKinley, William Randolph Hearst, but also the ignored Cuban and Philipino insurgents, like General Maximo Gomez and Emilio Aguinaldo. The first half of the show seemed as though it would pooh-pooh the dark side of the war, but PBS chose to more or less follow the changing mood of America itself towards its conquests -- from war fever to disillusionment. By the end of the film, the viewer begins to see the war -- with its racism, paternalism, undemocratic underpinnings, one-sided atrocities and the betrayal of the nationalistic aspirations of native-born people -- as the ugly little affair that it was. An epilogue brings the story to the present day, through independence, world war and revolution.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Nice Reminder of War Many Have Forgotten 18 July 2008
By Jeffery Mingo - Published on Amazon.com
My guess is that many of us Americans remember the Civil War and the World Wars, but many of us may have forgotten a war from approximately 110 years ago. We know of Fidel, but some do not know about American dynamics regarding Cuba before him. As the US is currently in a foreign war, this documentary reminds the viewer of another foreign war and perhaps we can learn lessons or make connections between the two.

This work had diverse interviewees: men and women, Americans and foreigners, Blacks, whites, Latinos, and Asians. What little that I read of "Fighting for American Manhood" was very strong and informative, so I was glad to see its author, Dr. K, Hoganson, interviewed for this work.

This work may be great for African-American Studies classes as well. The US sent Blacks to Cuba thinking they could deal with tropical environments better. Just like in the Vietnam War, Black and white soldiers were fighting each other just as much as with the foreign opponent. Black newspapers, just like in World War II, asked, "Why should we fight injustic abroad when no one is helping us seek justice here?" The stupidest thing is that many Americans of the majority background had no idea how many Cubans were Black.

I'm not a hawk in the slightest, but if you are going to watch a documentary on a war, you might as well see this one.

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