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A 2 page paper. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
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isolationism. The United States had recently weathered the depression that began in 1893 and a resurgence in 1903. The politics of Europe were a long way off and the
needs of the people in the US were immediate. To say that the United States entered the First World War reluctantly would be a gross understatement. When the US finally
did enter the great war it was more a matter of honoring commitments than fighting for a cause or idealogy. American involvement in World War I brought the issue
of independence to the fore once more. This time there was a general feeling that the United States had finally grown away from the need to pattern itself after the
European powers and had reached a maturity level previously unconsidered. Daniel T. Rodgers argues that those influences were strongest in the twentieth century before the United States entered World War
II. By detailing the adaptation and the ultimate rejection of European ideas by American reformers, Rodgers adds significantly to our understanding of the Progressive Era and the New Deal and
of the nature of American exceptionalism. American social reformers in 1900 were chagrined that their country had done little to ameliorate the harsh effects of the transition of the labor
force from farm to factory, from country to city. They were also aware that the United States lagged behind Europe in its struggle with such problems. For American reformers,
European nations were laboratories where responses to "the social question" were tested for possible use in the United States. Borrowing their solutions made American progressives part of a "broader North
Atlantic pattern" (56). The years between the two world wars saw a major change in the United States, primarily in terms of political acknowledgement of the rest of
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