War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

This is a study of the early writings of Richard Harding Davis, the premier American journalist of the 1890s, best remembered for his coverage of the Spanish-American War. The emphasis of the book is on Davis's reporting-including several volumes of travel writing, covering trips to the Near East and South and Central America. Some account is also made of his fiction, most especially Soldiers of Fortune (1897), which critics have seen as a romantic treatment of the imperialist élan. As such, the novel serves as a prolegomenon to the war in Cuba, which Davis covered during its insurrectionist stage. He later accompanied Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders when U.S. forces invaded the island in 1898, an action he had urged and may have in part inspired.

John Seelye argues that Davis, rather than supporting the notion of an American empire on the Roman or British plan, advocated what would become U.S. strategy over the next century: a limited engagement in support of embryonic democratic movements in the Caribbean, followed by withdrawal of armed forces once a stable government had been established. While approving British methods when they seemed in accord with his ideas of fairness, Davis was critical of the English presence in Egypt and was scathing in his treatment of the Boer War, championing the Dutch settlers over the invading army.

Like many others associated with the Spanish-American War, Davis was an ardent fan of football: fair play and good sportsmanship were integral to his notions of democratic expansionism, hence the title of this book. Seelye not only brings Davis into the mainstream of recent historical treatments of American imperialism, but makes a case that Davis was, as his contemporaries regarded him, a master of journalistic style.

University of Massachusetts Press

1123188279
War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

This is a study of the early writings of Richard Harding Davis, the premier American journalist of the 1890s, best remembered for his coverage of the Spanish-American War. The emphasis of the book is on Davis's reporting-including several volumes of travel writing, covering trips to the Near East and South and Central America. Some account is also made of his fiction, most especially Soldiers of Fortune (1897), which critics have seen as a romantic treatment of the imperialist élan. As such, the novel serves as a prolegomenon to the war in Cuba, which Davis covered during its insurrectionist stage. He later accompanied Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders when U.S. forces invaded the island in 1898, an action he had urged and may have in part inspired.

John Seelye argues that Davis, rather than supporting the notion of an American empire on the Roman or British plan, advocated what would become U.S. strategy over the next century: a limited engagement in support of embryonic democratic movements in the Caribbean, followed by withdrawal of armed forces once a stable government had been established. While approving British methods when they seemed in accord with his ideas of fairness, Davis was critical of the English presence in Egypt and was scathing in his treatment of the Boer War, championing the Dutch settlers over the invading army.

Like many others associated with the Spanish-American War, Davis was an ardent fan of football: fair play and good sportsmanship were integral to his notions of democratic expansionism, hence the title of this book. Seelye not only brings Davis into the mainstream of recent historical treatments of American imperialism, but makes a case that Davis was, as his contemporaries regarded him, a master of journalistic style.

University of Massachusetts Press

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War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

by John Seelye
War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

War Games: Richard Harding Davis and the New Imperialism

by John Seelye

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Overview

This is a study of the early writings of Richard Harding Davis, the premier American journalist of the 1890s, best remembered for his coverage of the Spanish-American War. The emphasis of the book is on Davis's reporting-including several volumes of travel writing, covering trips to the Near East and South and Central America. Some account is also made of his fiction, most especially Soldiers of Fortune (1897), which critics have seen as a romantic treatment of the imperialist élan. As such, the novel serves as a prolegomenon to the war in Cuba, which Davis covered during its insurrectionist stage. He later accompanied Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders when U.S. forces invaded the island in 1898, an action he had urged and may have in part inspired.

John Seelye argues that Davis, rather than supporting the notion of an American empire on the Roman or British plan, advocated what would become U.S. strategy over the next century: a limited engagement in support of embryonic democratic movements in the Caribbean, followed by withdrawal of armed forces once a stable government had been established. While approving British methods when they seemed in accord with his ideas of fairness, Davis was critical of the English presence in Egypt and was scathing in his treatment of the Boer War, championing the Dutch settlers over the invading army.

Like many others associated with the Spanish-American War, Davis was an ardent fan of football: fair play and good sportsmanship were integral to his notions of democratic expansionism, hence the title of this book. Seelye not only brings Davis into the mainstream of recent historical treatments of American imperialism, but makes a case that Davis was, as his contemporaries regarded him, a master of journalistic style.

University of Massachusetts Press


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781558493865
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 01/16/2003
Pages: 360
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.70(h) x 0.78(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

John Seelye is graduate research professor of American literature at the University of Florida. His many books include Beautiful Machine: Rivers and the American Republic, 1750--1825 and Memory's Nation: The Place of Plymouth Rock.

University of Massachusetts Press

Table of Contents

Illustrationsix
Prefacexi
Introduction (A Positioning Paper)1
Chapter 1The Game and the Nation16
Chapter 2Not a Little Given to Romance37
Chapter 3At Play in the Fields of Force54
Chapter 4Westward, Ha!73
Chapter 5Westward, Who?91
Chapter 6In Darkest Britain118
Chapter 7A Wave at Britannia's Rule140
Chapter 8Imperial Lessons163
Chapter 9Soldiers of the Transit192
Chapter 10Men without Women214
Chapter 11Shadows on the Plain234
Chapter 12The Looking-Glass War260
Chapter 13A Gentleman Unafraid287
Envoy315
Acknowledgments319
Bibliography321
Index327

What People are Saying About This

Sharon M. Harris

A truly welcome study of a long overlooked figure. Richard Harding Davis's work is very important in the area of renewed scholarship on nineteenth-century writers' involvement with the imperialist movements of their time.

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