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The American Experience - America 1900
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The American Experience - America 1900 List Price: $29.98


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In Theaters : 18 April, 2005
Video Release : 03 July, 2001
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The American Experience - America 1900 Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ A glimpse back at a country about to be changed
As the twentieth century arrived, the United States was already the most powerful nation on Earth and was beginning to project its' power across the globe. The last of the domestic Indian "wars" were over and America had recently defeated Spain and was now administering the former Spanish colonies of Cuba and the Philippines. It was a time of very rapid change, in fact the pace of change was arguably greater then than it was when the twenty first century arrived.
As one commentator so correctly states, nearly all of the major inventions that changed the twentieth century had just been invented, and what occurred during the twentieth century were engineering improvements and expanded use. Indoor plumbing, automobiles, moving pictures, mass transportation, phonograph records, telephones, electricity in the home, all forms of electric appliances and radio were just some of the new things that were beginning to be introduced. Not everyone had them yet, but nearly everyone had heard of them and knew that more and more people were using the new devices.
From the tape, you see the people of a nation strong, proud and confident, but also afflicted with a degree of fear and paranoia. These were completely new things, not just improvements on the old. The country had conquered all of the North American continent that it could, and so it was now looking beyond the coasts to lands thousands of miles away.
The American experience in Vietnam is still fresh in the public consciousness, but few know that a colonial war just as vicious was fought in Asia as the twentieth century dawned. The producers of this tape are to be commended for the inclusion of the gory details of what took place in that war. Some very brutal actions were taken by the American troops in fighting the Philippine insurrection. One point made is that all 1,000 inhabitants of one village were executed in retaliation for the killing of one American soldier. The American public agonized over what happened at My Lai in Vietnam, and yet the numbers killed at My Lai is dwarfed by many actions that took place in the Philippines. The derogatory term "gook" was also coined at that time to refer to Asians in general and the Filipinos in particular.
Many of the great social tensions that exploded so violently in the twentieth century were starting to develop and are described in the tape. As industrialization continues and the owners start amassing great, unprecedented fortunes, the workers begin to organize. To some extent, all professional groups are beginning to form unions, but the one given the most attention is the coal miners. Forced to work at dangerous jobs for very low pay, nearly 100,000 miners successfully strike for higher pay and better conditions. Their unprecedented and inevitable success was only the beginning of what was to become a great struggle for recognition and social protection.
The second great social tension was the growing plight of blacks. In 1898, the Supreme Court handed down the Plesy vs. Ferguson decision, which upheld the "separate but equal" concept of racial segregation. This was a license for the Jim Crow laws of enforced segregation, which kept blacks in inferior positions for over a half-century. The opinions of Booker T. Washington, who favored the approach of education and economic uplifting, and that of W. E. B. Dubois, who favored agitation for the right to vote are examined and contrasted. Unfortunately, no synthesis is done, as both men were right. Only the combination of economic improvement and the right to vote could lead to blacks attaining their full rights as citizens.
Like so many of the American Experience videos, this one is very well done. From the hindsight of over 100 years, we can see the optimism of a country that is powerful and growing even stronger. But we also see hints of fear and uncertainty, as tremendous change is taking place. From that perspective, nothing has really changed in this country in the century we just completed.
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