Hello!
Historical criticism will most likely take into account:
-The beliefs that were common during the period the text was written.
-Major political events that occurred when the text was written.
-The original audience for the text.
Why?
Historical criticism tries to understand the historical context behind a text, how the people of that time would think, how would they understand the message and what was the original intention of the author.
For studying that, historical factors should be studied. In the list, the suspenseful tone of the text and whether the text is popular with today's readers are not factors related to the historical context of the text.
Have a nice day!
They allowed investors to take fewer risk.
Answer:
Both are native american cultures.
Explanation:
Gulf indians:
The gulf indians belonged to the karankawa cultural group. They are seafood that includes turtle, fish, and oyster. They lived in areas that were dry so they were not farmers. They lived in wickiups.
The plain culture
The plain indians were skilled in horse riding. This gave them dominance as they used this skill whenever they attacked others. They were buffalo hunters and farmers. They made clothes out of buffalo skin and also fed from it's meat. The plain language included Siouan, alqonquian. Some of the people here were nomadic and they also belonged to the Comanche cultural group. They lived in teepees
War and International LawAmerica’s Foreign Policy: A Brief History
A central function of the U.S. government is to conduct relations with the almost 200 other nations in the world. A nation is a sovereign country, and as such, possesses the highest authority over its territories. All sovereign states are theoretically equal.
Foreign policy determines how America conducts relations with other countries. It is designed to further certain goals. It seeks to assure America’s security and defense. It seeks the power to protect and project America’s national interests around the world. National interest shapes foreign policy and covers a wide range of political, economic, military, ideological, and humanitarian concerns.
America’s foreign policy has changed over time reflecting the change in its national interest. As a new nation after the Revolutionary War, America’s prime national interest was to maintain its independence from more powerful European countries. Protected by the Atlantic Ocean, its major foreign policy, as typified by the Monroe Doctrine, was to limit European attempts of further colonization of the Western Hemisphere.
Through the 19th century, America concentrated on creating a nation that spanned the continent, and it avoided foreign entanglements. Once industrialized and more prosperous, it began looking for foreign markets and colonies.
By the turn of the 20th century, the United States had become a minor imperial power, fighting a war with Spain for Cuba and the Philippines and annexing Hawaii and several other territories. World War I engaged the United States in European affairs, but after the war, a wave of isolationist feeling swept the country. Refusing membership in the League of Nations, America turned inward once again. Absorbed by the prosperity of the 1920s and the Great Depression of the 1930s, America let its military strength erode. It was not prepared for war when the Japanese struck the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor in late 1941.
Emerging from World War II as the most powerful economic power on Earth, the United States changed its foreign policy dramatically. It took the lead in founding the United Nations. It invested billions of dollars through the Marshall Plan to help strengthen war-devastated European democracies. It created a system of alliances, including the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
Central to America’s foreign policy in the post-war period was the containment of the Soviet Union and communism. During the Cold War, the United States and its allies competed with the Soviet Union and its allies militarily, economically, and ideologically. Both sides created massive military forces and huge stockpiles of nuclear weapons. Although the two superpowers never went to war, the policy of containment led the United States into the bloody Korean and Vietnam wars.
The Cold War ended when the Soviet Union, economically exhausted from competing with the West, disintegrated. This left the United States the only remaining superpower in a world no longer ruled by the logic of containing the Soviet Union.
Through time, various constitutional principles and values have shaped American foreign policy. American foreign policy has favored the self-determination of nations for independence. Based on our commitment to constitutional government, we often favor and support nations that practice democracy. These principles, however, sometimes have conflicted with the goals of national security, economics, or the realities of international politics. In certain cases, America has supported dictatorial governments or intervened to curtail popular political movements.