The Unfinished Nation A Concise History of the American People
, by Brinkley, AlanNote: Supplemental materials are not guaranteed with Rental or Used book purchases.
- ISBN: 9780073406985 | 0073406988
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 1/3/2013
Known for its clear narrative voice and impeccable scholarship, Alan Brinkley's best-selling program for the U.S. survey course invites students to think critically about the many forces that continually create the Unfinished Nation that is the United States. In a concise but wide-ranging narrative, Brinkley shows the diversity and complexity of the nation and our understanding of its history--one that continues to evolve both in the events of the present and in our reexamination of new evidence and perspectives on the past. This edition features a series of Patterns of Popular Culture essays, as well as expanded coverage of pre-Columbian America, new America in the World essays, and updated coverage of recent events and developments that demonstrates how a new generation continues to shape the American story.
Chapter 1: The Collision of Cultures
America Before Columbus
Europe Looks Westward
The Arrival of the English
Debating the Past: The American Population Before Columbus
America in the World: The Atlantic Context of Early American History
America in the World: Mercantilism and Colonial Commerce
Consider the Source: Bartolome de las Casas, "Of the Island of Hispaniola"Chapter 2: Transplantations and Borderlands
The Early Chesapeake
The Growth of New England
The Restoration Colonies
Borderlands and Middle Grounds
The Development of Empire
Debating the Past: Native Americans and "The Middle Ground"
Consider the Source: Cotton Mather on the Recent History of New EnglandChapter 3: Society and Culture in Provincial America
The Colonial Population
The Colonial Economies
Patterns of Society
Awakenings and Enlightenments
Debating the Past: The Origins of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Witchcraft Trials
Consider the Source: Gottlieb Mittleburger, the Passage of Indentured ServantsChapter 4: The Empire in Transition
Loosening Ties
The Struggle for the Continent
The New Imperialism
Stirrings of Revolt
Cooperation and War
America in the World: The First Global War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Taverns in Revolutionary Massachusetts
Consider the Source: Benjamin Franklin, Testimony against the Stamp ActChapter 5: The American Revolution
The States United
The War for Independence
War and Society
The Creation of State Governments
The Search for a National Government
Debating the Past: The American Revolution
America in the World: The Age of Revolutions
Consider the Source: Abigail Adams discusses women’s rightsChapter 6: The Constitution and the New Republic
Framing a New Government
Adoption and Adaptation
Federalists and Republicans
Establishing National Sovereignty
The Downfall of the Federalists
Debating the Past: The Background of the Constitution
Consider the Source: Washington’s Farewell AddressChapter 7: The Jeffersonian Era
The Rise of Cultural Nationalism
Stirrings of Industrialism
Jefferson the President
Doubling the National Domain
Expansion and War
The War of 1812
America in the World: The Global Industrial Revolution
Patterns of Popular Culture: Horse Racing
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis, June 1803Chapter 8: Varieties of American Nationalism
Stabilizing Economic Growth
Expanding Westward
The "Era of Good Feelings"
Sectionalism and Nationalism
The Revival of Opposition
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the Missouri CompromiseChapter 9: Jacksonian America
The Rise of Mass Politics
"Our Federal Union"
The Removal of the Indians
Jackson and the Bank War
The Changing Tale of American Politics
Politics After Jackson
Debating the Past: Jacksonian Democracy
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Penny Press
Consider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaChapter 10: America's Economic Revolution
The Changing American Population
Transportation and Communications Revolutions
Commerce and Industry
Men and Women at Work
Patterns of Society
The Agricultural North
Patterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in America
Consider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 3: Society and Culture in Provincial America
The Colonial Population
The Colonial Economies
Patterns of Society
Awakenings and Enlightenments
Debating the Past: The Origins of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Witchcraft Trials
Consider the Source: Gottlieb Mittleburger, the Passage of Indentured ServantsChapter 4: The Empire in Transition
Loosening Ties
The Struggle for the Continent
The New Imperialism
Stirrings of Revolt
Cooperation and War
America in the World: The First Global War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Taverns in Revolutionary Massachusetts
Consider the Source: Benjamin Franklin, Testimony against the Stamp ActChapter 5: The American Revolution
The States United
The War for Independence
War and Society
The Creation of State Governments
The Search for a National Government
Debating the Past: The American Revolution
America in the World: The Age of Revolutions
Consider the Source: Abigail Adams discusses women’s rightsChapter 6: The Constitution and the New Republic
Framing a New Government
Adoption and Adaptation
Federalists and Republicans
Establishing National Sovereignty
The Downfall of the Federalists
Debating the Past: The Background of the Constitution
Consider the Source: Washington’s Farewell AddressChapter 7: The Jeffersonian Era
The Rise of Cultural Nationalism
Stirrings of Industrialism
Jefferson the President
Doubling the National Domain
Expansion and War
The War of 1812
America in the World: The Global Industrial Revolution
Patterns of Popular Culture: Horse Racing
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis, June 1803Chapter 8: Varieties of American Nationalism
Stabilizing Economic Growth
Expanding Westward
The "Era of Good Feelings"
Sectionalism and Nationalism
The Revival of Opposition
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the Missouri CompromiseChapter 9: Jacksonian America
The Rise of Mass Politics
"Our Federal Union"
The Removal of the Indians
Jackson and the Bank War
The Changing Tale of American Politics
Politics After Jackson
Debating the Past: Jacksonian Democracy
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Penny Press
Consider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaChapter 10: America's Economic Revolution
The Changing American Population
Transportation and Communications Revolutions
Commerce and Industry
Men and Women at Work
Patterns of Society
The Agricultural North
Patterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in America
Consider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 5: The American Revolution
The States United
The War for Independence
War and Society
The Creation of State Governments
The Search for a National Government
Debating the Past: The American Revolution
America in the World: The Age of Revolutions
Consider the Source: Abigail Adams discusses women’s rightsChapter 6: The Constitution and the New Republic
Framing a New Government
Adoption and Adaptation
Federalists and Republicans
Establishing National Sovereignty
The Downfall of the Federalists
Debating the Past: The Background of the Constitution
Consider the Source: Washington’s Farewell AddressChapter 7: The Jeffersonian Era
The Rise of Cultural Nationalism
Stirrings of Industrialism
Jefferson the President
Doubling the National Domain
Expansion and War
The War of 1812
America in the World: The Global Industrial Revolution
Patterns of Popular Culture: Horse Racing
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis, June 1803Chapter 8: Varieties of American Nationalism
Stabilizing Economic Growth
Expanding Westward
The "Era of Good Feelings"
Sectionalism and Nationalism
The Revival of Opposition
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the Missouri CompromiseChapter 9: Jacksonian America
The Rise of Mass Politics
"Our Federal Union"
The Removal of the Indians
Jackson and the Bank War
The Changing Tale of American Politics
Politics After Jackson
Debating the Past: Jacksonian Democracy
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Penny Press
Consider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaChapter 10: America's Economic Revolution
The Changing American Population
Transportation and Communications Revolutions
Commerce and Industry
Men and Women at Work
Patterns of Society
The Agricultural North
Patterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in America
Consider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 7: The Jeffersonian Era
The Rise of Cultural Nationalism
Stirrings of Industrialism
Jefferson the President
Doubling the National Domain
Expansion and War
The War of 1812
America in the World: The Global Industrial Revolution
Patterns of Popular Culture: Horse Racing
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis, June 1803Chapter 8: Varieties of American Nationalism
Stabilizing Economic Growth
Expanding Westward
The "Era of Good Feelings"
Sectionalism and Nationalism
The Revival of Opposition
Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the Missouri CompromiseChapter 9: Jacksonian America
The Rise of Mass Politics
"Our Federal Union"
The Removal of the Indians
Jackson and the Bank War
The Changing Tale of American Politics
Politics After Jackson
Debating the Past: Jacksonian Democracy
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Penny Press
Consider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaChapter 10: America's Economic Revolution
The Changing American Population
Transportation and Communications Revolutions
Commerce and Industry
Men and Women at Work
Patterns of Society
The Agricultural North
Patterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in America
Consider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 9: Jacksonian America
The Rise of Mass Politics
"Our Federal Union"
The Removal of the Indians
Jackson and the Bank War
The Changing Tale of American Politics
Politics After Jackson
Debating the Past: Jacksonian Democracy
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Penny Press
Consider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaChapter 10: America's Economic Revolution
The Changing American Population
Transportation and Communications Revolutions
Commerce and Industry
Men and Women at Work
Patterns of Society
The Agricultural North
Patterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in America
Consider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 11: Cotton, Slavery, and the Old South
The Cotton Economy
Southern White Society
Slavery: The "Peculiar Institution"
The Culture of Slavery
Debating the Past: The Character of Slavery
Consider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”Chapter 12: Antebellum Culture and Reform
The Romantic Impulse
Remaking Society
The Crusade Against Slavery
America in the World: The Abolition of Slavery
Consider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis
Looking Westward
Expansion and War
The Sectional Debate
The Crisis of the 1850s
Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Chapter 14: The Civil War
The Secession Crisis
The Mobilization of the North
The Mobilization of the South
Strategy and Diplomacy
Campaigns and Battles
Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil War
Consider the Source: Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 15: Reconstruction and the New South
The Problems of Peacemaking
Radical Reconstruction
The South in Reconstruction
The Grant Administration
The Abandonment of Reconstruction
The New South
Debating the Past: Reconstruction
Consider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpChapter 16: The Conquest of the Far West
The Societies of the Far West
The Changing Western Economy
The Romance of the West
The Dispersal of the Tribes
The Rise and Decline of the Western Farmer
Debating the Past: The Frontier and the West
Consider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaChapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 17: Industrial Supremacy
Sources of Industrial Growth
Capitalism and Its Critics
The Ordeal of the Worker
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio Alger
Consider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889Chapter 18: The Age of the City
The New Urban Growth
The Urban Landscape
Strains of Urban Life
The Rise of Mass Consumption
Leisure in the Consumer Society
High Culture in the Urban Age
America in the World: Global Migrations
Consider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 19: From Crisis to Empire
The Politics of Equilibrium
The Agrarian Revolt
The Crisis of the 1890s
Stirrings of Imperialism
War with Spain
The Republic as Empire
Debating the Past: Populism
America in the World: Imperialism
Consider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueChapter 20: The Progressives
The Progressive Impulse
Women and Reform
The Assault on the Parties
Sources of Progressive Reform
Crusades for Order and Reform
Theodore Roosevelt and the Modern Presidency
The Troubled Succession
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom
Debating the Past: Progressivism
America in the World: Social Democracy
Consider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 21: America and the Great War
The "Big Stick": America and the World, 1901-1917
The Road to War
"War Without Stint"
The Search for a New World Order
A Society in Turmoil
Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern Revivalism
Consider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 Chapter 22: The New Era
The New Economy
The New Culture
A Conflict of Cultures
Republican Government
America in the World: The Cinema
Consider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 23: The Great Depression
The Coming of the Depression
The American People in Hard Times
The Depression and American Culture
The Ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Debating the Past: Causes of the Great Depression
America in the World: The Global Depression
Consider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectChapter 24: The New Deal
Launching the New Deal
The New Deal in Transition
The New Deal in Disarray
Limits and Legacies of the New Deal
Debating the Past: The New Deal
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic Books
Consider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 25: The Global Crisis, 1921-1941
The Diplomacy of the New Era
Isolationism and Internationalism
From Neutrality to Intervention
Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl Harbor
America in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941
Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Chapter 26: America in a World at War
War on Two Fronts
The American Economy in Wartime
Race and Gender in Wartime America
Anxiety and Affluence in Wartime Culture
The Defeat of the Axis
Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Consider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 27: The Cold War
Origins of the Cold War
The Collapse of the Peace
America After the War
The Korean War
The Crusade Against Subversion
Debating the Past: The Cold War
Debating the Past: McCarthyism
Consider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Chapter 28: The Affluent Society
The Economic "Miracle"
The Explosion of Science and Technology
People of Plenty
The Other Americas
The Rise of the Civil Rights Movement
Eisenhower Republicanism
Eisenhower, Dulles, and the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and Desi
Consider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 29: Civil Rights, Vietnam, and The Ordeal of Liberalism
Expanding the Liberal State
The Battle for Racial Equality
"Flexible Response" and the Cold War
The Agony of Vietnam
The Traumas of 1968
Debating the Past: The Civil Rights Movement
Debating the Past: The Vietnam Commitment
America in the World: 1968
Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Chapter 30: The Crisis of Authority
The Youth Culture
The Mobilization of Minorities
The New Feminism
Environmentalism in a Turbulent Society
Nixon, Kissinger, and the War
Nixon, Kissinger, and the World
Politics and Economics in the Nixon Years
The Watergate Crisis
Debating the Past: Watergate
America in the World: The End of Colonialism
Consider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
Chapter 31: From the "Age of Limits" to the Age of Reagan
Politics and Diplomacy After Watergate
The Rise of the New Conservative Movement
The "Reagan Revolution"
America and the Waning of the Cold War
Patterns of Popular Culture: The Mall
Consider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982Chapter 32: The Age of Globalization
The Resurgence of Partisanship
The Economic Boom
Science and Technology in the New Economy
A Changing Society
A Contested Culture
The Perils of Globalization
America in the World: The Global Environmental Movement
Consider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993
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