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Comparative Perspectives on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
Ballard Campbell
Northeastern University
Thanks to Richard Jensen, Kriste Lindenmeyer, Alan Lessoff and William
G. Shade for helpful comments on this essay.
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Comparative perspectives on the
United States have received increased attention in recent years,
stimulated apparently by the rise in world history's popularity.
David Thelen's sponsorship of transnational history as a subject
of three special issues of the Journal of American History
no doubt has contributed to the trend. The reprinting of C. Vann
Woodward's The Comparative Approach to American History in
1997, the publication of George Fredrickson's essays on comparative
history, and the report of the La Pietra Project reflect recent
efforts to put United States history in an international perspective.1 While comparative history hardly has
gained equal footing with nationally-centered studies, enough
work on the Gilded Age and Progressive Era has appeared over the
last decade and a half to warrant an assessment. This essay takes
note of scholarship on economics, business, politics and governance
that has examined the United States within an international context
during the 1870s-1914 era. My objective is to discern trends in
the literature and suggest opportunities for future research rather
than to provide a comprehensive bibliographical survey.
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The Geography of Comparison.
Comparative history that includes the United States leans decidedly
toward Britain and Western Europe. Juxtaposing the United States
with England has long been popular, for obvious reasons, as have
studies that compare the United States with Western Europe.2
Two of the most important comparative works that appeared in the
1990s, Alfred Chandler's Scale and Scope and Daniel Rodgers'
Atlantic Crossings, fall into this geographic pattern.3
Chandler examined Britain and Germany in addition to the United
States, while Rodgers' European matchmates were England, Germany,
and France. Michael Mann's monumental exploration of classes and
state-building during the long nineteenth century included Great
Britain, France, Prussia-Germany, and Austria-Hungary, in addition
to the United States.4
Studies set within the tradition of western civilization perhaps
account for more than one-half of the comparative scholarship
reviewed here. Almost all discussions of American "exceptionalism"
are set within the north Atlantic community.5
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