US: A Narrative History Volume 2: Since 1865 ISE
Häftad, Engelska, 2021
Av James West Davidson, Brian DeLay, Christine Leigh Heyrman, Mark Lytle, Michael Stoff
1 769 kr
U.S., a brief American History program, transforms the learning experience through personalized, adaptive technology helping students better grasp the issues of the past while providing greater insight on student performance. This American History program tells the story of the American people in a highly portable and visually appealing manner helping students better connect with our nation's past and understand our present.
The Connect suite of assignments contains critical thinking exercises, interactive map exercises, the new Power of Process for Primary Sources, and of course Learnsmart and Smartbook, the only integrated learning system that empowers students by continuously adapting to deliver precisely what they need, when they need it. This comprehensive offer gives your students what they need, when and how they need it, so that your class time is more engaging and effective.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2021-05-19
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Upplaga9
- FörlagMcGraw-Hill Education
- ISBN9781260575132
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James West Davidson received his B.A. from Haverford College and his Ph.D. from Yale University. A historian who has pursued a full-time writing career, he is the author of numerous books, among them After the Fact: The Art of Historical Detection (with Mark H. Lytle), The Logic of Millennial Thought: Eighteenth Century New England, and Great Heart: The History of a Labrador Adventure (with John Rugge). He is co-editor with Michael Stiff of the Oxford New Narratives in American History, in which his most recent book appears: 'They Say': Ida B. Wells and the Reconstruction of Race. Brian DeLay (Ph.D., Harvard) is Assistant Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. He specializes in colonial and 19th century U.S. and Mexican history. His scholarship has won awards from the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic, the Western History Association, the Council on Latin American History, the American Society for Ethnohistory, the Pacific Coast Branch of the American Historical Association, and the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations. He is the author of War of a Thousand Deserts: Indian Raids and the U.S.-Mexican War (Yale, 2008), and is currently at work on a book about the international arms trade and the re-creation of the Americas during the long nineteenth century. He can be reached at delay@berkeley.edu and his website is http://history.berkeley.edu/faculty/DeLay/. Christine Leigh Heyrman is Associate Professor of History at the University of Delaware. She received a Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University and is the author of Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690-1750. Her book exploring the evolution of religious culture in the Southern U.S., entitled Southern Cross: The Beginnings of the Bible Belt, was awarded the Bancroft Prize in 1998. Mark H. Lytle received his Ph.D. from Yale University and is Professor of History and Environmental Studies. he has served two years as Mary Ball Washington Professor of American History at University College, Dublin, in Ireland. His publications include The Origins of the Iranian-American Alliance, 1941-1953, After the Fact: The Art of Historical Detection (with James West Davidson), America's Uncivil Wars: The Sixties Era from Elvis to the Fall of Richard Nixon, and, most recently, The Gentle Subversive: Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, and the Rise of the Environmental Movement. He is co-editor of a joint issue of the journals of Diplomatic History and Environmental History dedicated to the field of environmental diplomacy. Michael B. Stoff is Associate Professor of History and Director of the Plan II Honors Program at the University of Texas at Austin. The recipient of a Ph.D. from Yale University, he has been honored many times for his teaching, most recently with election to the Academy of Distinguished Teachers. He is the author of Oil, War, and American Security: The Search for a National Policy on Foreign Oil,1941-1947, co-editor (with Jonathan Fanton and R. Hal Williams) of The Manhattan Project: A Documentary Introduction to the Atomic Age, and series co-editor (with James West Davidson) of the Oxford New Narratives in American History. He is currently working on a narrative on the bombing of Nagasaki.
- 17 RECONSTRUCTING THE UNION 1865–1877AN AMERICAN STORY:A Secret Sale at Davis BendPresidential ReconstructionLincoln’s 10 Percent PlanReconstruction under Andrew JohnsonThe Failure of Johnson’s ProgramJohnson’s Break with CongressThe Fourteenth AmendmentThe Election of 1866Congressional ReconstructionPost-Emancipation Societies in the AmericasThe Land IssueImpeachmentReconstruction in the SouthBlack and White RepublicansReforms under the New State GovernmentsEconomic Issues and CorruptionBlack AspirationsExperiencing FreedomThe Black FamilyThe Schoolhouse and the ChurchNew Working ConditionsPlanters and a New Way of LifeThe Abandonment of ReconstructionThe Grant AdministrationGrowing Northern DisillusionmentThe Triumph of White SupremacyHISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Dressed to KillThe Disputed Election of 1876Racism and the Failure of ReconstructionCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING Source: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division [LC-USZ62-46975] 18 THE NEW SOUTH AND THE TRANS-MISSISSIPPI WEST 1870–1890AN AMERICAN STORY:“Come West”The Southern BurdenTenancy and SharecroppingSouthern IndustryThe Sources of Southern PovertyLife in the New SouthRural LifeThe ChurchSegregationWestern FrontiersWestern LandscapesIndian Peoples and the Western EnvironmentWhites and the Western Environment: Competing VisionsThe War for the WestContact and ConflictCuster’s Last Stand—and the Indians’HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Picturing Custer’s Defeat, Indian StyleKilling with KindnessBorderlandsEthno-Racial Identity in the New WestBoom and Bust in the WestMining Sets a PatternThe Transcontinental RailroadCattle KingdomThe Final FrontierFarming on the PlainsA Plains ExistenceThe Urban FrontierThe West and the World EconomyPackaging and Exporting the “Wild West”CHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 19 THE NEW INDUSTRIAL ORDER 1870–1900AN AMERICAN STORY:Scampering through AmericaThe Development of Industrial SystemsNatural Resources and Industrial TechnologySystematic InventionTransportation and CommunicationFinance CapitalThe CorporationAn International Pool of LaborRailroads: America’s First Big BusinessA Managerial RevolutionCompetition and ConsolidationThe Challenge of FinanceThe Growth of Big BusinessStrategies of GrowthCarnegie Integrates SteelRockefeller and the Great Standard Oil TrustThe Mergers of J. Pierpont MorganCorporate DefendersCorporate CriticsThe Costs of Doing BusinessThe Workers’ WorldIndustrial WorkChildren, Women, and African Americans at WorkThe American Dream of SuccessThe Systems of LaborEarly UnionsHISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Digital DetectingThe Knights of LaborThe American Federation of LaborThe Limits of Industrial SystemsManagement Strikes BackCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 20 THE RISE OF AN URBAN ORDER 1870–1900AN AMERICAN STORY:“The Dogs of Hell”A New Urban AgeThe Urban ExplosionThe Great Global MigrationHolding the City TogetherBridges and SkyscrapersSlum and TenementRunning and Reforming the CityBoss RuleRewards, Accomplishments, and CostsNativism, Revivals, and the Social GospelThe Social Settlement MovementCity LifeThe Immigrant in the CityUrban Middle-Class LifeMANY HISTORIES City ScenesVictorianism and the Pursuit of VirtueChallenges to ConventionThe Decline of “Manliness”City CulturePublic Education in an Urban Industrial WorldHigher Learning and the Rise of the ProfessionalHigher Education for WomenA Culture of ConsumptionLeisureArts and EntertainmentCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 21 REALIGNMENT AT HOME AND EMPIRE ABROAD 1877–1900AN AMERICAN STORY:“The World United at Chicago”The Politics of ParalysisPolitical StalemateThe PartiesThe IssuesThe White House from Hayes to HarrisonFerment in the States and CitiesThe Revolt of the FarmersThe Harvest of DiscontentThe Origins of the Farmers’ AllianceThe Alliance PeaksThe Election of 1892The New RealignmentThe Depression of 1893MANY HISTORIES What Should the Government Do?The Rumblings of UnrestThe Battle of the StandardsCampaign and ElectionThe Rise of Jim Crow PoliticsThe African American ResponseMcKinley in the White HouseVisions of EmpireImperialism, European and American StyleThe Shapers of American ImperialismDreams of a Commercial EmpireThe Imperial MomentMounting TensionsThe Imperial WarPeace and the Debate over EmpireFrom Colonial War to Colonial RuleAn Open Door in ChinaCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 22 THE PROGRESSIVE ERA 1890–1920AN AMERICAN STORY:Burned Alive in the CityThe Roots of Progressive ReformProgressive BeliefsThe Pragmatic ApproachThe Progressive MethodThe Search for the Good SocietyPoverty in a New LightExpanding the “Woman’s Sphere”Social WelfareWoman SuffrageControlling the MassesStemming the Immigrant TideThe Curse of Demon RumProstitution“For Whites Only”HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Mementos of MurderThe Politics of Municipal and State ReformThe Reformation of the CitiesProgressivism in the StatesProgressivism Goes to WashingtonTRA Square DealBad Food and Pristine WildsThe Troubled TaftThe Election of 1912Woodrow Wilson and the Politics of MoralityEarly CareerThe Reforms of the New FreedomLabor and Social ReformCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 23 THE UNITED STATES AND THE COLLAPSE OF THE OLD WORLD ORDER 1901–1920AN AMERICAN STORY:“A Path between the Seas”Progressive DiplomacyBig Stick in the CaribbeanA “Diplomatist of the Highest Rank”Dollar DiplomacyWoodrow Wilson and Moral DiplomacyMissionary DiplomacyIntervention in MexicoThe Road to WarThe Guns of AugustNeutral but Not ImpartialThe Diplomacy of NeutralityPeace, Preparedness, and the Election of 1916Wilson’s Final Peace OffensiveWar and SocietyThe Slaughter of Stalemate“You’re in the Army Now”Mobilizing the EconomyWar WorkGreat MigrationsPropaganda and Civil LibertiesMANY HISTORIES The Limits of Free SpeechOver ThereThe Influenza Pandemic of 1918–1919The Lost PeaceThe Treaty of VersaillesThe Battle for the TreatyRed ScareCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 24 THE NEW ERA 1920–1929AN AMERICAN STORY:Yesterday Meets Today in the New EraThe Roaring EconomyTechnology, Consumer Spending, and the Boom in ConstructionThe AutomobileThe Future of EnergyThe Business of AmericaWelfare CapitalismThe Consumer CultureA Mass SocietyA “New Woman”Mass MediaThe Cult of Celebrity“Ain’t We Got Fun?”The Art of AlienationA “New Negro”Defenders of the FaithNativism and Immigration RestrictionThe “Noble Experiment”KKKFundamentalism versus DarwinismRepublicans AscendantThe Politics of “Normalcy”The Policies of Mellon and HooverCrises at Home and AbroadThe Election of 1928The Great Bull MarketThe Rampaging BullThe Great CrashCauses of the Great DepressionCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 25 THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE NEW DEAL 1929–1939AN AMERICAN STORY:Letters from the EdgeThe Human Impact of the Great DepressionHard TimesThe Golden Age of Radio and FilmHISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Wonder Woman, Women's Rights, and Birth Control“Dirty Thirties”: An Ecological DisasterMexican Americans and RepatriationAfrican Americans in the DepressionThe Tragedy of Herbert HooverThe Failure of ReliefThe Hoover Depression ProgramStirrings of DiscontentThe Bonus ArmyThe Election of 1932The Early New Deal (1933–1935)The Democratic RooseveltsMANY HISTORIES Two Views of the “Forgotten Man”Saving the BanksRelief for the UnemployedPlanning for Industrial RecoveryPlanning for AgricultureA Second New Deal (1935–1936)Dissent from the DealThe Second Hundred DaysThe Election of 1936The New Deal and the American PeopleThe New Deal and Western WaterThe Limited Reach of the New DealTribal RightsA New Deal for WomenThe Rise of Organized Labor“Art for the Millions”The End of the New Deal (1937–1940)Packing the CourtsThe Demise of the DealThe Legacy of the New DealCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 26 AMERICA’S RISE TO GLOBALISM 1927–1945AN AMERICAN STORY:Pearl HarborThe United States in a Troubled WorldPacific InterestsBecoming a Good NeighborThe Quest for NeutralityInching toward WarHitler’s InvasionRetreat from IsolationismDisaster in the PacificA Global WarStrategies for WarGloomy ProspectsA Grand AllianceThe Naval War in the PacificTurning Points in Europe and AfricaThose Who FoughtMinorities at WarWomen at WarWar ProductionMobilizing for WarScience Goes to WarWar Work and ProsperityOrganized LaborWomen WorkersMobilityA Question of RightsItalians and Asian AmericansMANY HISTORIES “Who Do You Want to Win This War?”—Justifying InternmentMinorities and War WorkUrban UnrestThe New Deal in RetreatWinning the War and the PeaceThe Fall of the Third ReichTwo Roads to TokyoBig Three DiplomacyThe Road to YaltaThe Fallen LeaderThe HolocaustA Lasting PeaceAtom DiplomacyCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 27 COLD WAR AMERICA 1945–1954AN AMERICAN STORY:Glad to Be Home?The Rise of the Cold WarAmerican SuspicionsCommunist ExpansionA Policy of ContainmentThe Truman DoctrineThe Marshall PlanNATOThe Atomic Shield versus the Iron CurtainHISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX Duck and CoverPostwar ProsperityHidden Costs of a Consuming NationPostwar AdjustmentsThe New Deal at BayThe Election of 1948The Fair DealThe Cold War at HomeThe Shocks of 1949The Loyalty CrusadeHUAC and HollywoodThe Ambitions of Senator McCarthyFrom Cold War to Hot War and BackPolice ActionThe Chinese InterveneTruman versus MacArthurThe Global Implications of the Cold WarThe Election of 1952The Fall of McCarthyCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 28 THE SUBURBAN ERA 1945–1963AN AMERICAN STORY:Dynamic Obsolescence (The Wonderful World of Harley Earl)The Rise of the SuburbsA Boom in Babies and in HousingSuburbs and Cities TransformedEnvironmental BluesThe Culture of SuburbiaAmerican Civil Religion“Homemaking” Women in the Workaday WorldThe Flickering Gray ScreenThe Politics of CalmThe Eisenhower PresidencyThe Conglomerate WorldCracks in the ConsensusCritics of Mass CultureJuvenile Delinquency, Rock and Roll, and RebellionNationalism in an Age of SuperpowersTo the Brink?Brinkmanship in AsiaThe SuperpowersNationalism UnleashedThe Response to SputnikMANY HISTORIES The Kitchen DebateThaws and FreezesThe Cold War on a New FrontierThe Election of 1960The Hard-Nosed Idealists of CamelotThe (Somewhat) New Frontier at HomeKennedy’s Cold WarCold War FrustrationsConfronting KhrushchevThe Missiles of OctoberCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 29 CIVIL RIGHTS AND UNCIVIL LIBERTIES 1947–1969AN AMERICAN STORY:Two Roads to IntegrationThe Civil Rights MovementThe Changing South and African AmericansThe NAACP and Civil RightsThe Brown DecisionLatino Civil RightsA New Civil Rights StrategyLittle Rock and the White BacklashA Movement Becomes a CrusadeRiding to FreedomCivil Rights at High TideThe Fire Next TimeBlack PowerViolence in the StreetsLyndon Johnson and the Great SocietyThe Origins of the Great SocietyThe Election of 1964The Great SocietyThe Reforms of the Warren CourtYouth MovementsActivists on the New Left and RightMANY HISTORIES Student Voices for a New AmericaVatican II and American CatholicsThe Rise of the CountercultureThe Rock RevolutionThe West Coast SceneCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 30 THE VIETNAM ERA 1963–1975AN AMERICAN STORY:Who Is the Enemy?The Road to VietnamLyndon Johnson’s WarRolling ThunderSocial Consequences of the WarThe Soldiers’ WarThe War at HomeThe UnravelingTet OffensiveThe Shocks of 1968Revolutionary Clashes WorldwideWhose Silent Majority?The Nixon EraVietnamization—and CambodiaFighting a No-Win WarThe Move toward DétenteThe New Identity PoliticsLatino Activism HISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX A Farmworkers’ Boycott PosterThe Choices of American IndiansAsian AmericansGay RightsFeminismEqual Rights and AbortionValue Politics: The Consumer and Environmental MovementsTechnology and Unbridled GrowthPolitical ActionThe Legacy of Identity and Value PoliticsThe End of the WarPragmatic ConservatismNixon’s New FederalismStagflationSocial Policies and the CourtTriumph and RevengeBreak-InTo the Oval OfficeResignationCHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 31 THE CONSERVATIVE CHALLENGE 1976–1992AN AMERICAN STORY:Born AgainThe Conservative RebellionMoving Religion into PoliticsThe Catholic ConscienceTax RevoltThe Media as BattlegroundSaturday Night FeverThe Presidency in Transition: Gerald Ford and Jimmy CarterTrimming Presidential PowersEnergy and the Middle EastLimits across the GlobeJimmy Carter: Restoring the FaithThe Search for DirectionEnergy and the EnvironmentThe Sagging EconomyForeign Policy: Principled or Pragmatic?The Middle East: Hope and HostagesA President Held HostagePrime Time with Ronald ReaganThe Great CommunicatorThe Reagan AgendaA Halfway RevolutionWinners and Losers in the Labor MarketStanding Tall in a Chaotic WorldThe Military BuildupDisaster in the Middle EastFrustrations in Central AmericaThe Iran-Contra ConnectionCover BlownFrom Cold War to GlasnostAn End to the Cold WarA Post–Cold War Foreign PolicyHISTORIAN’S TOOLBOX The Berlin WallThe Gulf WarDomestic DoldrumsThe Conservative CourtDisillusionment and AngerThe Election of 1992CHAPTER SUMMARY | ADDITIONAL READING 32 THE UNITED STATES IN A GLOBAL COMMUNITY 1989–PresentAN AMERICAN STORY:Of Grocery Chains and Migration ChainsThe New ImmigrationThe New Look of America—Asian AmericansThe New Look of America—LatinosIllegal ImmigrationReligious DiversityThe Clinton PresidencyThe New World DisorderRecovery without Reform at HomeThe Conservative Revolution RebornWomen’s IssuesScandalThe Election of 2000The United States in a Networked WorldThe Internet RevolutionAmerican Workers in a Two-Tiered EconomyThe Persistence of a Racial DivideAfrican Americans in a Full-Employment EconomyGlobal Pressures in a Multicultural AmericaTerrorism in a Global AgeA Conservative Agenda at HomeUnilateralism in Foreign AffairsThe Roots of TerrorThe War on Terror: First PhaseThe War in IraqA Messy AftermathThe Second TermDisasters Domestic and ForeignCollapseA Divided NationFirst-Term ReformsShort, Medium, LongEnvironmental UncertaintiesMANY HISTORIES Cold War over Global WarmingTrumpThe Global Community