Over spring break I was able to
spend a considerable amount of time at the Newberry Library and I continued
reading the Pan American Bulletin. Because of the amount of information
that is expected to be in each months issue and at the year-end bulletin
summing up the records from previous year, the authors were forced to be brief
in their reporting of events and data. I think that what the bulletin's authors chose to
focus on and exclude from each issue can help to determine any ideological agendas the writers
might have had.
Considering this approach, there is a patter to the reporting of
information in the bulletin which is especially true for trade statistics.
After a general reporting of trade information about a country, the bulletin will always include
a paragraph devoted to either the growth of US trade in the country or a diatribe
against shrinking US trade. This pattern has held for every single country
in every single issue I have encountered thus far. This information is hardly
ground breaking, but it is evidence that the Bulletin of the Pan American Union
was used by John Barrett and others to validate and
further their views that the United States was going to, and should, control a
cultural and economic hegemony in North and South America.
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