Progressive New World: How Settler Colonialism and Transpacific Exchange Shaped American Reform

Progressive New World: How Settler Colonialism and Transpacific Exchange Shaped American Reform

by Marilyn Lake (Author)

Synopsis

The paradox of progressivism continues to fascinate more than one hundred years on. Democratic but elitist, emancipatory but coercive, advanced and assimilationist, Progressivism was defined by its contradictions. In a bold new argument, Marilyn Lake points to the significance of turn-of-the-twentieth-century exchanges between American and Australasian reformers who shared racial sensibilities, along with a commitment to forging an ideal social order. Progressive New World demonstrates that race and reform were mutually supportive as Progressivism became the political logic of settler colonialism. White settlers in the United States, who saw themselves as path-breakers and pioneers, were inspired by the state experiments of Australia and New Zealand that helped shape their commitment to an active state, women's and workers' rights, mothers' pensions, and child welfare. Both settler societies defined themselves as New World, against Old World feudal and aristocratic societies and Indigenous peoples deemed backward and primitive. In conversations, conferences, correspondence, and collaboration, transpacific networks were animated by a sense of racial kinship and investment in social justice. While Asiatics and Blacks would be excluded, segregated, or deported, Indians and Aborigines would be assimilated or absorbed. The political mobilizations of Indigenous progressives-in the Society of American Indians and the Australian Aborigines' Progressive Association-testified to the power of Progressive thought but also to its repressive underpinnings. Burdened by the legacies of dispossession and displacement, Indigenous reformers sought recognition and redress in differently imagined new worlds and thus redefined the meaning of Progressivism itself.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Edition: 1
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 25 Jan 2019

ISBN 10: 0674975952
ISBN 13: 9780674975958

Media Reviews
This is a landmark book that provides an integral account of the circulatory systems that connected white reform communities in the large Anglophone societies that lay on either side of the Pacific. In abundant detail, Lake shows how the democratic and racialist programs of these reformers were two sides of the same settler-colonialist coin.--Doug Rossinow, coeditor of Outside In: The Transnational Circuitry of US History
Few Americans know that in the early twentieth century Australia passed the first minimum-wage laws and gave women the vote; but American reformers were inspired by their counterparts in the antipodes. Marilyn Lake has written a stunning book about transpacific Progressivism.--Mae M. Ngai, author of Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America

Lake powerfully invokes the Australasian connection to U.S. politics and culture, substantiating the range and depth of those ties and illuminating political thought at both ends of the geographical divide. A worthy counterpart to Daniel Rodgers's iconic Atlantic Crossings, Progressive New World offers a fresh and valuable take on the transnational Progressive era.

--Leon Fink, author of The Long Gilded Age: American Capitalism and the Lessons of a New World Order
Author Bio
Marilyn Lake is Australian Research Council Professorial Fellow and Professor in History at the University of Melbourne.