ID | 174948 |
Title Proper | Clarence Streit, Federalist Frameworks, and Wartime American Internationalism* |
Language | ENG |
Author | Imlay, Talbot |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | In February 1941 Life magazine published “The American Century.” Written by Henry Luce, the media mogul and Life’s owner, the article has become a referential document—the clearest expression perhaps of the United States’ mid-twentieth century claim to global leadership. In the article, Luce invoked a pantheon of well-known people, including Roosevelt, Churchill, Hitler, Lenin, Hoover, and Coolidge. Even the Dalai Lama got a mention, as did Genghis Khan (twice). But only one non-leader figured on the list: Clarence Streit. A New York Times correspondent in Geneva during the 1930s, Streit in 1939 had published Union Now, a book-length proposal for the creation of a federal union of the North Atlantic democracies modeled on the American constitution. For Streit, the “more perfect Union” forged in 1787 in which the thirteen American states had agreed to endow the federal government with exclusive authority over a limited number of areas, should now be applied on a transatlantic scale. |
`In' analytical Note | Diplomatic History Vol. 44, No.5; Nov 2020: p.808–833 |
Journal Source | Diplomatic History Vol: 44 No 5 |
Key Words | Clarence Streit ; Federalist Frameworks ; Wartime American Internationalism |