The American People Creating a Nation and a Society, Concise Edition, Volume 2
, by Nash, Gary B.; Jeffrey, Julie Roy; Howe, John R.; Frederick, Peter J.; Davis, Allen F.; Winkler, Allan M.; Mires, Charlene; Pestana, Carla Gardina- ISBN: 9780205805389 | 0205805388
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 12/2/2010
Gary B. Nash received his Ph.D. from Princeton University. He is currently Director of the National Center for History in the Schools at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he teaches colonial and revolutionary American history. A former president of the Organization of American Historians, his scholarship is especially concerned with the role of common people in the making of history.
Julie Roy Jeffrey earned her Ph.D. in history from Rice University. Since then she has taught at Goucher College. Honored as an outstanding teacher, Jeffrey has been involved in faculty development activities and curriculum evaluation. She was Fullbright Chair in American Studies at the University of Southern Denmark, 1999-2000 and John Adams Chair of American History at the University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, 2006. She is the author of many articles on the lives and perceptions of nineteenth-century women. Her research continues to focus on abolitionism as well as on history and film.
John R. Howe received his Ph.D. from Yale University. At the University of Minnesota, he has taught the U.S. history survey and courses on the American revolutionary era and the early republic. His present research deals with the social politics of verbal discourse in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Boston. He has received a Woodrow Wilson Graduate Fellowship, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Research Fellowship from the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History.
Peter J. Frederick received his Ph.D. in history from the University of California, Berkeley. His career of innovative teaching began at California State University, Hayward, in the 1960s and continued at Wabash College (1970-2004) and Carleton College (1992-1994) He also served as distinguished Professor of American History and Culture at Heritage University on the Yakama Nation reservation in Washington between 2004 and 2006. Recognized nationally as a distinguished teacher and for his many articles and workshops on teaching and learning, Frederick was awarded the Eugene Asher Award for Excellence in Teaching by the AHA in 2000.
Allen F. Davis earned his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin. A former president of the American Studies Association, he is a professor emeritus at Temple University and editor of Conflict and Consensus in American History (9th ed., 1997).
Allan M. Winkler received his Ph.D. from Yale University. He has taught at Yale and the University of Oregon, and he is now Distinguished Professor of History at Miami University of Ohio. An award-winning teacher, he has also published extensively about the recent past. His research centers on the connections between public policy and popular mood in modern history.
Charlene Mires earned her Ph.D. in history at Temple University. At Villanova University, she teaches courses in nineteenth- and twentieth-century U.S. history, public history, and material culture. She is the author of Independence Hall in American Memory (2002) and serves as editor of the Pennsylvania History Studies Series for the Pennsylvania Historical Association. A former journalist, she was a co-recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for general local news reporting with other staff members at the Fort Wayne (Indiana) News-Sentinel.
Carla Gardina Pestana received her Ph.D. from the University of California at Los Angeles. She taught at Ohio State University, where she served as a Lilly Teaching Fellow and launched an innovative on-demand publishing project. Currently she holds the W.E. Smith Professorship in History at Miami University. At present, she is completing a book on religion in the British Atlantic world to 1830 for classroom use.
Recovering the Past | p. xii |
Maps | p. xii |
Preface | p. xiii |
Supplements | p. xxi |
About the Authors | p. xxiii |
The Union Reconstructed | p. 457 |
The Bittersweet Aftermath of War | p. 459 |
National Reconstruction Politics | p. 464 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Novels | p. 468 |
The Lives of Freedpeople | p. 471 |
Reconstruction in the Southern States | p. 478 |
Conclusion: A Mixed Legacy | p. 486 |
A Modernizing People, 1877 to 1929 | p. 489 |
The Realities of Rural America | p. 489 |
Modernizing Agriculture | p. 491 |
The West | p. 494 |
Resolving the Native American Question | p. 501 |
The New South | p. 505 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Magazines | p. 506 |
Farm Protest | p. 514 |
Conclusion: Farming in the Industrial Age | p. 518 |
The Rise of Smokestack America | p. 520 |
The Texture of Industrial Progress | p. 522 |
Industrial Work and the Laboring Class | p. 528 |
Capital Versus Labor | p. 535 |
Strive and Succeed | p. 539 |
The Politics of the Gilded Age | p. 542 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Congressional Hearings | p. 550 |
Conclusion: The Complexity of Industrial Capitalism | p. 552 |
The New Metropolis | p. 554 |
The Industrial City | p. 556 |
The New Urban Geography | p. 564 |
Reforming the City | p. 572 |
RECOVERING the PAST: World's Fairs | p. 576 |
Conclusion: Cities Transformed | p. 579 |
Becoming a World Power | p. 582 |
Steps Toward Empire | p. 584 |
Expansionism in the 1890s | p. 588 |
War in Cuba and the Philippines | p. 591 |
Theodore Roosevelt's Energetic Diplomacy | p. 598 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Political Cartoons | p. 600 |
Conclusion: The Responsibilities of Power | p. 608 |
The Progressives Confront Industrial Capitalism | p. 611 |
The Social Justice Movement | p. 613 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Documentary Photographs | p. 618 |
The Worker in the Progressive Era | p. 624 |
Reform in the Cities and States | p. 629 |
Theodore Roosevelt and the Square Deal | p. 631 |
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom | p. 640 |
Conclusion: The Limits of Progressivism | p. 643 |
The Great War | p. 646 |
The Early War Years | p. 647 |
The United States Enters the War | p. 654 |
The Military Experience | p. 658 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Government Propaganda | p. 660 |
Domestic Impact of the War | p. 665 |
Planning for Peace | p. 670 |
Conclusion: The Divided Legacy of the Great War | p. 673 |
Affluence and Anxiety | p. 676 |
Postwar Problems | p. 678 |
A Prospering Economy | p. 681 |
Clashing Values | p. 688 |
Hopes Raised, Promises Deferred | p. 691 |
The Business of Politics | p. 696 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Advertising | p. 702 |
Conclusion: A New Era of Prosperity and Problems | p. 704 |
A Resilient People, 1929 to Present | p. 707 |
The Great Depression and the New Deal | p. 707 |
The Great Depression | p. 709 |
Economic Decline | p. 711 |
Roosevelt and the First New Deal | p. 714 |
One Hundred Days | p. 717 |
The Second New Deal | p. 723 |
The Last Years of the New Deal | p. 730 |
The Other Side of the 1930s | p. 733 |
RECOVERING the PAST: The Movies | p. 736 |
Conclusion: The Mixed Legacy of the Great Depression and the New Deal | p. 738 |
World War II | p. 741 |
The Twisting Road to War | p. 743 |
Battles and Bullets | p. 749 |
The Impact of War | p. 758 |
Insiders and Outsiders | p. 763 |
RECOVERING the PAST: History, Memory, and Monuments | p. 770 |
Conclusion: Peace, Prosperity, and International Responsibility | p. 772 |
Chills and Fever During the Cold War, 1945-1960 | p. 775 |
Origins of the Cold War | p. 777 |
Containing the Soviet Union | p. 781 |
Containment in Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America | p. 786 |
Atomic Weapons and the Cold War | p. 794 |
The Cold War at Home | p. 798 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Public Opinion Polls | p. 802 |
Conclusion: Tire Cold War in Perspective | p. 805 |
Postwar America at Home, 1945-1960 | p. 808 |
Economic Boom | p. 810 |
Demographic and Technological Shifts | p. 818 |
Consensus and Conformity | p. 822 |
Origins of the Welfare State | p. 826 |
The Other America | p. 832 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Clothing | p. 838 |
Conclusion: Qualms amid Affluence | p. 841 |
Reform and Rebellion in the Turbulent Sixties, 1960-1969 | p. 844 |
John F. Kennedy: The Camelot Years | p. 846 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Television | p. 850 |
Lyndon B. Johnson and the Great Society | p. 855 |
Continuing Confrontations with Communists | p. 865 |
War in Vietnam and Turmoil at Home | p. 868 |
Conclusion: Political and Social Upheaval | p. 876 |
Disorder and Discontent, 1969-1980 | p. 878 |
The Decline of Liberalism | p. 880 |
The Ongoing Effort in Vietnam | p. 888 |
Constitutional Conflict and Its Consequences | p. 891 |
The Continuing Quest for Social Reform | p. 898 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Popular Music | p. 902 |
Conclusion: Sorting Out the Pieces | p. 910 |
Conservatism and a Shift in Course, 1980-2010 | p. 913 |
New Politics in a Conservative Age | p. 915 |
An End to Social Reform | p. 925 |
Economic and Demographic Change | p. 930 |
RECOVERING the PAST: Autobiography | p. 936 |
Foreign Policy and the End of the Cold War | p. 938 |
Conclusion: The Recent PAST in Perspective | p. 948 |
Appendix | p. A-1 |
Glossary | p. G-1 |
Index | p. I-1 |
Credits | p. C-1 |
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