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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page exploration of the question of whether domestic affairs or foreign affairs played the most important role in shaping American politics in 1790. The author contends that Americans in this era had little time to invest in foreign affairs. Instead they were tied up trying to establish their own foundational system. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPus1790.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Much has changed since our earliest history as a
nation in regard to the way that the United States interacts with the rest of the world. During the last decade of the eighteenth century the U.S. was completely
consumed with her own domestic affairs. Although she was certainly aware of what was happening around the world, there was little she could do to assist in that situation.
Not only was she a new country but she was a tremendously weak country, a country that had yet to establish the basic foundation that would ultimately steady her
in her evolutionary path to becoming a premier world power. The American Revolution had marked the escape from monarchical control for the colonists
that ultimately became the first citizens of this fledgling country. The American Revolution was essentially fought to preserve the independence the colonial entities had come to expect since their
migration to the Americas. The colonists had, in fact, grown weary of monarchical control and had lashed out to end that control. When they did so, however, they
were left in a tenuous state. Although much of the old system of government and social interaction the colonists had lived
under in England was still in place in the new nation, much was soon to change. The precise nature of that change, however, would vary in accordance with a
number of factors. While the colonists in the "New World" shared certain ideological values, there were also sectional differences. These differences were to be a focal point for
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