Soldiers of Fortune

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Broadview Press, 2006 M06 2 - 272 pages

A romance of America’s nascent imperial power, Richard Harding Davis’s Soldiers of Fortune recounts the adventures of Robert Clay, a mining engineer and sometime mercenary, and Hope Langham, the daughter of a wealthy American industrialist, as they become caught up in a coup in Olancho, a fictional Latin American republic. When the coup, organized by corrupt politicians and generals, threatens the American-owned Valencia Mining Company, Clay organizes his workers and the handful of Americans visiting the mine into a counter-coup force. Written on the eve of the Spanish-American War, Soldiers of Fortune casts the young American as the dashing, hypermasculine hero of the new military and economic. A huge best-seller, the novel did its part to push the nation into war against Spain, and stands as one of the most important texts in the literature of American imperialism.

The appendices, which bring together primary materials by writers and politicians such as Rebecca Harding Davis, Theodore Roosevelt, Jose Martí, Mark Twain, Herbert Spencer, and others, address such issues as social Darwinism, masculinity, and ideas of Anglo-American superiority.

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Contents

Acknowledgements
7
Introduction
9
A Brief Chronology
33
A Note on the Text
37
Soldiers of Fortune
39
Images of Davis
225
How Others Saw Davis
229
Reviews of Soldiers of Fortune
235
Social Darwinism Survival of the Richest and Other Notions of AngloAmerican Superiority
241
Davis and Others on American Masculinity
251
From William James Letter on Governor Roosevelts Oration
255
Davis and Others on American Imperialism
257
Select Bibliography
265
Copyright

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About the author (2006)

Brady Harrison is Associate Professor of English at the University of Montana. He is the author of Agent of Empire: William Walker and the Imperial Self in American Literature (University of Georgia Press, 2004).

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