In 1899 the United States, having announced its arrival as a world
power during the Spanish-Cuban-American War, inaugurated a brutal
war of imperial conquest against the Philippine Republic. Over the
next five decades, U.S. imperialists justified their colonial
empire by crafting novel racial ideologies adapted to new realities
of collaboration and anticolonial resistance. In this pathbreaking,
transnational study, Paul A. Kramer reveals how racial politics
served U.S. empire, and how empire-building in turn transformed
ideas of race and nation in both the United States and the
Philippines.
Kramer argues that Philippine-American colonial history was
characterized by struggles over sovereignty and recognition. In the
wake of a racial-exterminist war, U.S. colonialists, in dialogue
with Filipino elites, divided the Philippine population into
"civilized" Christians and "savage" animists and Muslims. The
former were subjected to a calibrated colonialism that gradually
extended them self-government as they demonstrated their
"capacities." The latter were governed first by Americans, then by
Christian Filipinos who had proven themselves worthy of shouldering
the "white man's burden." Ultimately, however, this racial vision
of imperial nation-building collided with U.S. nativist efforts to
insulate the United States from its colonies, even at the cost of
Philippine independence. Kramer provides an innovative account of
the global transformations of race and the centrality of empire to
twentieth-century U.S. and Philippine histories.