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The heart of this exploration is the transformation of Anglo-America from a small Tudor kingdom into a global power over three centuries, a feat unmatched by other European nations. The author argues that this evolution is rooted in three significant English-speaking civil wars: the English Civil War, the American Revolution, and the American Civil War. These conflicts, characterized as wars between cousins, forged critical religious, ethnic, and political alliances among English-speaking nations, setting them on distinct paths toward global leadership—one aristocratic and imperial in the nineteenth century, and the other more egalitarian and democratic in the twentieth. These wars also had devastating effects on African Americans, Native Americans, and the Irish. The analysis reveals the interconnectedness of these conflicts and their mutual influence, offering surprising interpretations across the political spectrum. For instance, the U.S. Constitution, while innovative, is critiqued as a flawed compromise that contributed to the outbreak of the American Civil War, the bloodiest of the cousins' wars. As the new millennium prompts a reevaluation of the nation's historical role, this narrative provides a sweeping and thought-provoking perspective on the triumph of Anglo-America.
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The Cousins' Wars, Kevin Phillips
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- Année de publication
- 1999
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