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American Midnight: The Great War, a Violent Peace, and Democracy's Forgotten Crisis (2022)

by Adam Hochschild

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3341081,068 (4.12)26
Showing 10 of 10
Quite enjoyable. Learned things about the American Legion, Wilson, the prison sentences of conscientious objectors and unionists, and so much more. It was quite good.
  g33kgrrl | Sep 1, 2024 |
This book exposed what America became when aroused with war fever. Arguably, the issues that led to the eruption of the Great War had very little to do with any American National Interests. Indeed, the United States was never in any real danger of attack. However, the population was whipped up to a war frenzy and they vented their ire against any group that was perceived as not being sufficiently patriotic - that is, did not support the war effort enough. Hochschild discusses the plethora of pseudo-governmental groups that were called into existence to fight any "perceived" non-patriotic movement: these included workers' rights groups, womens' rights groups, socialist leaning groups, ethnic, minority groups. In short, there was a field day on any group that was not of northern European descent and capitalist groups. The book also showed Woodrow Wilson as less than of an inspired idealist as I have come to see him.

On the whole this books helps to show a darker side of American society as it grappled with the Great War and its immediate aftermath.

My only real criticism of this work is that endnoting system. Hochschild has adopted the newer system of not using endnote numbers. Instead, one must constant check the back of the book to see if the paragraph one just read has any accompanying endnote. Then, one must divine which reference is the note for which fact in the aforementioned paragraph. This is as opposed to just using numbers to reference endnotes. ( )
  Blythewood | Dec 19, 2023 |
This was chosen by Sheila Miyosh Jager, Professor of East Asian History at Oberlin College, Ohio and author of The Other Great Game: The Opening of Korea and the Birth of Modern East Asia (Belknap Press, 2023), as one of History Today’s Books of the Year 2023.

Find out why at HistoryToday.com.
  HistoryToday | Nov 24, 2023 |
American Midnight by Adam Hochschild takes an immersive look at various aspects of the United States in the years surrounding our entry into WWI with the war serving as a backdrop, not the focus. Hochschild turns an analytical eye on Wilson, the repressive government and community actions taken in the name of “nationalism”, and the opposition work of many fighting for rights during this oppressive time. History readers looking for a critical look at this period of racism, nativism, anti-labor, and the disparate Wilson will enjoy American Midnight. ( )
  Hccpsk | Jun 26, 2023 |
History doesn’t repeat itself, but it sure as heck rhymes. Hochschild chronicles the history of often violent anti-labor, anti-immigrant, anti-radical, misogynist, anti-Black initiatives by ruling white men in the years surrounding the First World War. He notes the use of torture on radicals at home by men who’d learned waterboarding in the Philippines, and who, before the rise of “white” as a category covering Italians, Russians, and many Jews, saw them as racial inferiors. Suppressing speech was an integral part of this campaign against kinds of people, as it is today. ( )
  rivkat | Mar 3, 2023 |
This is an excellent but horrifying history about an extremely violent and repressive, but mostly (as per the title) forgotten 4-year period in American history, from 1917, when the U.S. entered WW I, to 1920. Woodrow Wilson became president in 1913 as a liberal reformer, and many like-minded politicians and other figures joined his administration to help with the project of making life better for laborers and helping to reduce the large wealth gap that had formed between the working class and the owners of industry. (Sound familiar?) In many important ways, however, Wilson was no bargain. Although he'd served as governor of New Jersey, Wilson was a Georgia native and a firm proponent of Jim Crow. For example, he went about resegregating the areas of the federal government that had made progress in that area. At first he was opposed to U.S. involvement in WW I, running for reelection under the slogan, "He kept us out of war." But as the war progressed, and the allies became hard pressed, they turned to the U.S. for armaments and other supplies, going into huge debt to the U.S government and munitions companies, among others, to the extent that an Allied defeat in the war would have occasioned massive defaults and extensive losses to U.S. creditors. Well, that couldn't be allowed. That's not the only cause that Hochschild provides for the U.S. entry into the war, but it is an extremely significant one, and something I'd never realized.

Once the U.S. was involved, Wilson's Attorney General and other high-ranking figures went to town, using the war effort as an excuse for furious and violent repression. The so-called Espionage Act of 1917 made it a crime punishable by long prison terms to criticize the war effort or the government, or to complain about war profiteering. A nationwide civilian vigilante organization called the American Protective League was organized and given carte blanche for violent and even often deadly activities. People got lynched for refusing to buy War Bonds. Massive, coordinated, roundups of draft-aged men took place, and woe betide anyone who couldn't show a draft card. This was all a cover for nativist, rightwing politicians who wanted to hound immigrants, the labor movement, conscientious objectors, socialists, Jews, Catholics and, it goes without saying, Blacks. Good old J. Edgar Hoover got his start during these days. And Wilson, still supposedly a reformer, either condoned or turned a blind eye to all of it. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the Espionage Act (very little espionage was ever uncovered), and did so in a unanimous ruling despite the presence of Louis Brandeis and Oliver Wendell Holmes on the court (Holmes, in particular, later did an about face on this subject). The whole period was a horror show from beginning to end. It wasn't until the end of the war and, in particular, the advent of the Warren Harding administration, that some of the main perpetrators of the offenses began to be discredited (in events reminiscent of Joseph McCarthy's toppling) and the American body politic finally lost their appetite for the repression. And although Harding is generally remember with derision nowadays, Hoschshild makes the point that he immediately began commuting the sentences of and releasing from jail the many political prisoners still being held under the Espionage Act long after the war, and the dangers of espionage, had ended. Or, has Harding put it to a journalist off the record even before assuming the presidency, "Why should we kid each other? Debs* was right, we never should have been in that war."

* Leading, and extremely popular, Socialist politician Eugene Debs, who had previously garnered massive amounts of votes while running for president, and running again for president in 1920 from his prison cell (jailed under the Espionage Act), still garnered 900,000 votes nationwide. Harding let him out. Debs, Emma Goldman, and other socialist and anti-war leaders get excellent pocket biographies in this book.

This is a very well-written history, though towards the end it becomes progressively (you should pardon the expression) harder to read, as it is largely a recitation of objectionable people and events. Hochschild does spend a bit of time at the very end drawing parallels between that time and this one in American history. How could he not? Unpleasantness aside, the book is fascinating and provides, I believe, essential information for all Americans (at the very least) wanting to understand the antecedents of today's massive strains of nativist, repressive movements that currently flourish here. ( )
1 vote rocketjk | Jan 27, 2023 |
I'm not sure if reading this book makes me feel better because things aren't worse today, or feel worse because things aren't better today. ( )
  lemontwist | Dec 12, 2022 |
I appreciated how this book highlighted a period that is often skipped over, that of America's involvement in and the immediate aftermath of World War I, and what was happening in American life during that era. The cast of characters (or rather, historic figures) is large and ranges from people like President Woodrow Wilson, activist Emma Goldman, young J. Edgar Hoover, and socialist Eugene Debs. If this history has a flaw, it's that the author seems to be emphasizing how relevant the themes of this period are to today's culture and politics, rather than just allowing this to be apparent to the reader. Overall, however, I did find this history to be insightful and would recommend it to anyone with an interest in American history. ( )
  wagner.sarah35 | Nov 18, 2022 |
“These were no ordinary times. Yet they are largely left out of the typical American history book. There’s always a chapter on the First World War… Turn the page, and the next chapter begins with the Roaring Twenties… This book is about what’s missing between those two chapters. It is a story of mass imprisonments, torture, vigilante violence, censorship, killings of black Americans, and far more...It is a story of how a war supposedly fought to make the world safe for democracy became the excuse for a war against democracy at home.”

Narrative history covering the tumultuous years 1917 to 1921 in American history, which was rife with civil rights abuses, including censorship, surveillance, unjustified imprisonment, torture, and lynchings. The entrance of the US into World War I was used as justification to track down and deport “undesirables” and repress dissension. To tell the story, the author focuses notables such as Woodrow Wilson, Colonel Edward House, J. Edgar Hoover, Eugene Debs, Emma Goldman, Kate Richards O’Hare, A. Mitchell Palmer, Leo Wendell, and others.

It is a disturbing account, and Hochschild does not spare the horrifying details. People were persecuted for their pacifism, alliance with labor unions, or basically any behavior deemed “unpatriotic.” The root causes of these abuses were nationalism, racism, fear of Communism, and xenophobia. These may sound familiar. It is a reminder to safeguard civil liberties and to learn from past mistakes. ( )
  Castlelass | Nov 16, 2022 |
American Midnight by Adam Hochschild presents both an unsettling period in our history as well as a cautionary tale for our current times.

Suppression of free speech, violence toward anyone not agreeing with the faux-patriots of the day, championing big business over workers to the point of violence, increased racism and antisemitism. These sound like I am talking about current events but I'm highlighting the US during the period covered in the book, 1917-1921. While the history is fascinating, how it speaks to today is important, if listened to.

Hochschild makes clear he is biased, biased against unjustified violence and suppression, hatred of people for nothing more than their race or religion. In other words, anyone who complains about bias as a negative of the book must find those aspects unobjectionable. Even a fake historian complained about a small part (a couple of sentences) on the grounds that it would have been just fine in those days. First, that is just wrong. There were many people, especially former US military men who still bristled so soon after the Civil War at the sight of the Confederate flag used as anything other than a memorial for fallen soldiers of the war. Add that this was shortly after the big "lost cause" push that promoted a false understanding of the war and of the confederate south and the mention of a comment about a Confederate flag is indeed a justifiable one. Especially since the "compliment" was that it was an "honorable flag." The quote, in context, is about that General acting like he was campaigning for office and playing up very specific constituencies. So anyone who makes such a dog-whistle filled complaint about the book is simply showing their own disgraceful colors. Ignore the poor little thing, he is compensating for, um, shortcomings.

This extremely well-researched book reads almost like an epic novel. The facts are weaved into a narrative, with the historical characters demonstrating who and what they are through their very actions (or inactions) and words. Some history nonfiction can easily be read either as a whole or in chunks as the urge strikes. This one compels the reader to keep turning pages so is like a novel in that respect as well.

Highly recommended for (actual) history buffs as well as those who want to fill in the many gaps of the typical history taught in schools. Also for those who want to look to the past to help understand and react to the present. Not as highly recommended for the small-brained who think what happened then and what is happening now is fine and anyone pointing out the unethical and immoral ways are overly biased.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley. ( )
  pomo58 | Aug 19, 2022 |
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