Thanks to you, we are celebrating our 25th anniversarypfirs.com Founding Festival

pfirs.com

For more information Here
My StoreMy Store change

trending ! Jacobson, Matthew Frye - Barbarian Virtues

※pfirs.com Limited model
YouTubers have introduced us to the usability of our products!
Introducing video here

Online sales
Price (tax included)

4.99 USD

  • Register your Komeri Card Number and pay with Komeri Card
    Comeri Point : Earned 5 points

About Komeri Points

Reduce the number of items purchased
Increase the number of items purchased

    Pick up at the store Pick up at the store
    (no-cost distribution) 

    Pickup store:

    Choose a view

    Check nearby stores

    Estimated shipping time:

    purchase by

    1pm → Prepare by 5pm

    5pm → Prepare by The next morning 

    How to receive and shipping fees

    Add to Cart

    Delivery transport ​

    Estimated fulfillment time:

    transport is scheduled for around 2026/01/21.

    Cash on delivery is limited to credit or cash on delivery. For other payment methods, please refer to here.

    *It may take various time for the product to be delivered on January Wednesday, or public holidays, and depending on stock availability.

    Regarding same-day shipping conditions

    How to receive and shipping fees

    Shop

    Add to wish list

    Added to wish list

    More information about Jacobson, Matthew Frye - Barbarian Virtues

    "Barbarian Virtues: The United States Encounters Foreign Peoples at Home and Abroad, 1876-1917," by Matthew Frye Jacobson, published by Hill & Wang, 2000.
    ISBN: 0-8090-2808-5
    Weight: 1.35 Lbs
    Cover: Hardcover
    Condition: prefer latest
    Pages: 323

    From AI: Barbarian Virtues: The United States Encounters Foreign Peoples at Home and Abroad, 1876-1917 by Matthew Frye Jacobson, published by Hill & Wang in 2000, examines the complex attitudes of the United States toward foreign peoples during a period of imperial expansion and mass immigration. Jacobson explores how Americans perceived and interacted with both immigrants arriving in the U.S. and the peoples of territories that the U.S. sought to control overseas. He argues that the era's dominant discourse combined both fear and fascination with foreign "barbarians," leading to contradictory policies of exclusion at home and aggressive imperialism abroad. The book highlights themes of race, citizenship, and national identity, showing how these

    Search for products in the same category

    Bestseller ranking

    View more this category

    People who viewed this product also viewed these products

    Products from nearby sales areas

    View more this category

    Customer reviews

    Recommendation level   4.1

    

    Currently, 697 reviews have been posted.