Venezuela and the United States: From Monroe's Hemisphere to Petroleum's Empire

Front Cover
University of Georgia Press, 1996 - Political Science - 267 pages
Long before sea power, the Panama Canal, and petroleum drew the world's attention to the Caribbean coast, United States leaders recognized Venezuela's potential as the linchpin of the Caribbean's southern rim. In Venezuela and the United States, Judith Ewell provides a historical analysis of the main themes and directions of U.S.-Venezuelan relations from the early 1800s, when Simon Bolivar declared an American Republican identity and Monroe proclaimed U.S. responsibility for the hemisphere to the present, when Venezuelan relations with the United States reflect the growing importance of the developing world and its multilateral challenges to U.S. global hegemony.

Authoritatively treating the political, economic, and cross-cultural dynamics of two nations, Ewell approaches her subject from both a Venezuelan and U.S. perspective. Her careful understanding of conflicting interests and purposes shows how other players, from Great Britain to OPEC, have affected the course of the nations' diplomatic relationship. Ewell demonstrates that Venezuela's two-hundred-year history with the United States reflects all of the key moments and issues in inter-American relations, from the Roosevelt and Olney Corollaries to the Monroe Doctrine, the Good Neighbor Policy, the Cold War, the North-South dialogues, the debt controversies, and the post-Cold War era.

Using popular literature, folklore, and travel accounts, Ewell examines how Venezuelans and yanquis have perceived each other over the years and relates how the strong U.S. presence in business and popular culture has created in Venezuelans feelings of both love and hatred for the "American way of life." The author argues, however, that in a hemisphere clearly dominated by the U.S., a new international order has arisen, giving weak nations like Venezuela greater influence while creating a complex mosaic of alliances. A model history of binational relations, Venezuela and the United States captures both the drama and the significance of the two nations' diplomatic affairs.

 

Contents

The Origins 17901830
11
Gunboats and Caudillos 18301866
37
Rogues and Heroes 18661896
63
Venezuela Dodges the Big Stick 18971912
91
Oil and the Democratic Caesar 19121935
117
Good Neighbors and the Dismantling
144
The Hydrocarbon Economy and
168
From Hemispheric to Global Perspectives
199
Notes
225
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1996)

Judith Ewell is Newton professor of history, and department chair, at the College of William and Mary. Her books include Venezuela, A Century of Change and The Human Tradition in Latin America: Nineteenth Century, which she coedited with William Beezley.

Bibliographic information