preview

Spanish American War Analysis

Decent Essays

Throughout history, American perception of the causes of the Spanish-American War of 1898 has shifted drastically. As new facts and first-hand accounts come to light in the years following its events, historians have more information to make assessments, and as a result there are clear differences in the writings of three historians in three different points of time. Shortly after the events of the Spanish-American War, the blame of the war was mostly placed on the Cubans, with a focus on military strategy. The textbook, An American History, published in 1911, references a United States that was fixated on the military angle of relations with Spain and Cuba. According to the author of An American History, David Saville Musey, “... it was …show more content…

In the time between the publishing of An American History and 1942, American perception of the Spanish-American War became increasingly emotional. The authors of America: The Story of a Free People, citing “In the fall of 1896, Weyler turned certain towns and cities into concentration areas, driving women, children, and old men within stockaded quarters where they perished like flies.” The author later goes on to describe the horrible conditions over 100,000 Cuban citizens were forced to endure, an experience roughly half would survive. At the same time, the United States’ involvement is justified through the securitization of American ideals in defenseless territories. United States citizens at the time used words that conveyed negative beliefs about the Spanish people, going as far as to call Dupuy de Lome, a Spanish minister exposed to have published a letter slandering President McKinley, “stupid”. Historians in the 1940’s believed that the emotional response to Spain’s brutality was the motivation of the United States to enter the Spanish-American

Get Access