America's history: Volume 2 Since 1865
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Boston ; New York
Bedford/St. Martin's
2021
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 1 Band (verschiedene Seitenzählungen) Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten |
ISBN: | 9781319275891 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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Contents Brief Contents i About the Cover Image Versions and Supplements xx Maps, Figures, and Tables vii Preface: Why This Book This Way Special Features xiv xxx xxxii PART 5 Consolidating a Continental Union, 1844-1877 (continued) CHAPTER 14 CHAPTER15 Reconstruction, Conquering a Continent, 1865-1877 484 1860-1890 518 •9 Why and how did the United States build a continental empire, and how did this affect people living in the West? Why did freedpeople. Republican policymakers, and ex-Confederates all end up dissatisfied with Reconstruction — or with its aftermath? To what degree did each group succeed in fulfilling its goals? Library of Congress. 3g04085 Library of Congress, LC-USZC4-973 487 Presidential Approaches: From Lincoln to Johnson Congress Versus the President 488 Radical Reconstruction 491 Womens Rights Denied 493 The Republican Economic Program The Struggle for National Reconstruction 496 The Quest for Land 496 Republican Governments in the South Building Black Communities 504 The Meaning of Freedom The Undoing of Reconstruction 500 505 The Republicans Unravel 506 Counterrevolution in the South 509 Reconstruction Rolled Back 511 The Political Crisis of 1877 512 Lasting Legacies 512 487 528 Mining Empires 529 From Bison to Cattle on the Plains Homesteaders 532 The First National Park 535 Incorporating the West 530 A Harvest of Blood: Native Peoples Dispossessed The Civil War and Indians on the Plains Grant’s Peace Policy 539 The End of Armed Resistance 543 Strategies of Survival 546 Western Myths and Realities 546 CHAPTER 15 REVIEW CHAPTER 14 REVIEW 521 The New
Union and the World 521 Integrating the National Economy 522 536 536 549 516 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS AMERICA IN THE WORLD How Rational Were the Great Railroad Empires? Labor Laws After Emancipation: Haiti and the United States 489 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Representing Indians 540 524 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN 514 The South's "Lost Cause" xxi
PART 6 Industrializing America: Upheavals and Experiments, CHAPTER 16 CHAPTER 17 Industrial America: Corporations and Conflicts, 1877-1911 554 Making Modern American Culture, Why did large corporations arise and thrive in late nineteenth century America, and how did they reshape trade, work, and politics? 1880-1917 584 ^^ hfCDR₽OR. A »tlHllftM ,^''л ' мм мга«яа . in uit · шам V/m, :«m t uw« м или. "Zf Why and how did Americans' identities, beliefs, and culture change in the early industrial era? ем· «ШЯ й»1 The Granger Collection Library of Congress, LC-DIG-ggbain-03008 Science and Faith The Rise of Big Business 587 Darwinism and Its Critics 587 Religion: Diversity and Innovation Realism in the Arts 593 557 Innovators in Enterprise 557 The Corporate Workplace 561 On the Shop Floor 562 Commerce and Culture Immigrants, East and West 568 Newcomers from Europe 569 Asian Americans and Exclusion 573 Labor Gets Organized 574 The Emergence of a Labor Movement 574 The Knights of Labor 577 Farmers and Workers: The Cooperative Alliance 578 Another Path: The American Federation of Labor 580 CHAPTER 16 REVIEW 589 595 Consumer Spaces 596 Masculinity and the Rise of Sports The Great Outdoors 601 Women, Men, and the Solitude of Self 603 Changing Families 603 Expanding Opportunities for Education Womens Civic Activism 607 CHAPTER 17 REVIEW 582 598 615 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Poverty and Food 564 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Christianity in the United States and Japan AMERICA IN THE WORLD Emigrantsand Destinations, 1881-1915 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN WCTU Women "Do Everything" 608 xxii 570 604
591
1877-1917 550 CHAPTER 18 CHAPTER 19 "Civilization's Inferno": The Rise and Reform of Industrial Cities, 1880-1917 616 Whose Government? Politics, Populists, Why and how did the rise of big cities shape American society and politics? Why and how did Progressive Era reformers seek to address the problems of industrial America, and to what extent did they succeed? * and Progressives, 1880-1917 646 ‘=* Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, National Gallery of Art. Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington The New Metropolis 618 The Landscape of the Industrial City 619 Newcomers and Neighborhoods 621 City Cultures 624 Governing the Great City 629 Urban Political Machines 629 The Limits of Machine Government Crucibles of Progressive Reform 634 CHAPTER 18 REVIEW 637 649 Electoral Politics After Reconstruction The Populist Program 656 649 The Political Earthquakes of the 1890s 659 Depression and Reaction 659 Democrats and the “Solid South” 660 Republicans Retake National Control 662 Theodore Roosevelt as President Diverse Progressive Goals 668 The Election of 1912 672 Wilson’s Reforms, 1913-1917 645 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Power and Appeal of the Ward Boss Reform Visions, 1880-1892 Reform Reshaped, 1901-1912 635 Fighting Dirt and Vice 636 The Movement for Social Settlements Cities and National Politics 642 Library of Congress, 1 $09215 666 666 674 Economic Reforms 674 Progressive Legacies 677 631 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did Urban Progressive Reformers Approach Environmentalism? 638 CHAPTER 19 REVIEW 678 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Making Modern Presidents 650
COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS Were the "Gilded Age" and "Progressive Era" Separate Periods? 654 xxiii
PART 7 Global Ambitions and Domestic Turmoil, 680 1890-1945 CHAPTER 20 CHAPTER 21 An Emerging World Power, Unsettled Prosperity: From War to Depression, 1919-1932 7i6 1890-1918 684 Why did the United States become a major power on the world stage by the 1910s, and what impact did this have at home and abroad? Bettmann/Getty Images Picture Research Consultants Archives From Expansion to Imperialism Foundations of Empire The War of 1898 688 Spoils of War 691 687 687 A Power Among Powers 692 The Open Door in Asia 693 The United States and Latin America The United States in World War I From Neutrality to War 697 “Over There” 699 War on the Home Front 702 710 The Fate of Wilson’s Ideas 711 Congress Rejects the Treaty 713 719 The Red Scare 719 Racial Backlash 721 American Business at Home and Abroad 722 Government and Business Entangled 724 Making a Modern Consumer Economy 694 697 Postwar Abundance 724 Consumer Culture 726 The Automobile and Suburbanization 724 728 732 Women in a New Age 732 Culture Wars 736 The Harlem Renaissance 740 The Coming of the Great Depression From Boom to Bust 744 The Depressions Early Years 715 AMERICA IN THE WORLD The Human Cost ofWorld War I Resurgent Conservatism The Politics and Culture of a Diversifying Nation Catastrophe at Versailles CHAPTER 20 REVIEW Why did cultural and political conflict erupt in the 1920s, and what factors led to the Great Depression? CHAPTER 21 REVIEW 744 746 748 703 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN German Americans in World War I 706 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Automobile Transforms America 729 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did
Immigrants Experience America at theTurn of the Century? 734 xxiv
CHAPTER 22 CHAPTER 23 Managing the Great Depression, The World at War, Forging the New Deal, 1929-1938 750 1937-1945 786 Why and how did World War II transform the United States domestically and internationally? Why did the New Deal change the role of government in American life, and what were the economic and social consequences? Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images Early Responses to the Depression, 1929-1932 Crisis Management Under Hoover Rising Discontent 754 The 1932 Election 756 The New Deal Arrives, 1933-1935 753 753 804 Mobilizing for War at Home 804 Migration and the Wartime City 805 Japanese Removal 809 769 Fighting and Winning the War 811 Wartime Aims and Tensions 811 The War in Europe 812 The War in the Pacific 816 The Atomic Bomb, the Soviet Threat, and the End of the War 817 The Toll of the War 821 785 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Economic Nationalism in the United States and Mexico THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The New Deal and Public Works 722 798 Life on the Home Front 765 A More Inclusive Democracy 771 Reshaping the Environment 779 The New Deal and the Arts 783 The Legacies of the New Deal 783 CHAPTER 22 REVIEW 794 796 Financing the War 796 Mobilizing the American Fighting Force Workers and the War Effort 799 Politics in Wartime 803 The Second New Deal and the Redefining of Liberalism, 1935-1938 764 The New Deal and American Society 789 The Rise of Fascism 789 War Approaches 791 The Attack on Pearl Harbor Organizing for a Global War 757 The First Hundred Days 757 The New Deal Under Attack 761 The Welfare State
Comes into Being From Reform to Stalemate 766 The Road to War 770 CHAPTER 23 REVIEW 822 AMERICA IN THE WORLD The Scales of War: Losses and Gains During World Warll 797 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Mobilizing the Home Front 806 XXV
PART 8 The Modern State and the Age of Liberalism, 824 1945-1980 CHAPTER 24 CHAPTER 25 The Cold War Dawns, Triumph of the Middle Class, 1945-1963 828 1945-1963 866 Why did the international rivalry of the Cold War create a climate of fear at home and how did it affect politics and society in the United States? swin ink 2/Corbis via Getty Images Containment in a Divided World Justin Locke/National Geographic/Getty Images Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society 833 Origins of the Cold War 833 The Containment Strategy 836 Containment in Asia 842 Economy: From Recovery to Dominance A Nation of Consumers 872 Youth Culture 877 Religion and the Middle Class 880 Cold War Liberalism 848 Truman and the End of Reform 848 Red Scare: The Hunt for Communists 851 Modern Republicanism and the Liberal State The Modern Nuclear Family 881 The Baby Boom 881 Women, Work, and Family 883 Challenging Middle-Class Morality 854 Cold War in the Postcolonial World 855 Colonial Independence Movements 856 John F. Kennedy and Renewed East-West Tensions Making a Commitment in Vietnam 863 CHAPTER 24 REVIEW Why did consumer culture become such a fixture of American life in the postwar decades, and how did it affect politics and society? 860 886 The Postwar Housing Boom 886 Rise of the Sunbelt 891 Two Societies: Urban and Suburban 865 CHAPTER 25 REVIEW COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did Cold War Interventions Differ Worldwide? THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Global Cold War 838 xxvi 884 A Suburban Nation 831 897 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Postwar Capitalism 873 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Cold War America
Suburb 888 893 869 868
CHAPTER 26 CHAPTER 27 The Civil Rights Movement, Liberal Crisis and Conservative 1941-1973 898 Rebirth, 1961-1972 936 IL Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/Bridgeman Images AP Photo The Emerging Civil Rights Struggle, 1941-1957 Life Under Jim Crow 901 Roots of the Civil Rights Movement 902 World War II: The Beginnings 903 Cold War Civil Rights 905 Mexican Americans and Japanese Americans Fighting for Equality Before the Law 909 Forging a Protest Movement, 1955-1965 Nonviolent Direct Action 912 Legislating Civil Rights, 1963-1965 901 Liberalism at High Tide 938 John F. Kennedy’s Promise 939 Lyndon B. Johnson and the Great Society Rebirth of the Womens Movement 944 940 The Vietnam War Begins 948 Escalation Under Johnson 949 Public Opinion and the War 951 The Student Movement 954 907 912 Days of Rage, 1968-1972 917 Widening Demands for Equality, 1966-1973 925 Black Nationalism 925 Urban Unrest 929 Rise of the Chicano Movement 931 The American Indian Movement 932 CHAPTER 26 REVIEW Why did debates over liberal values in the 1960s lead to social conflict and divide the country? Why did the civil rights movement change over time, and how did competing ideas and strategies evolve within the movement itself? 957 War Abroad, Tragedy at Home 957 Rising Political Radicalism 959 Womens Liberation and Black and Chicana Feminism Stonewall and Gay Liberation 964 962 Rise of the Silent Majority 965 Nixon in Vietnam 965 The Silent Majority Speaks Out 968 The 1972 Election 970 934 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS Was Martin Luther King Jr. a Radical or a Reformer? 915 THINKING LIKE A
HISTORIAN Civil Rights and Black Power: Strategy and Ideology 920 CHAPTER 27 REVIEW 972 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS What Are the Origins of 1960s Feminism? 946 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Debating the War in Vietnam 952 xxvii
H PART 9 Globalization and the End PART 8 (continued) CHAPTER 28 CHAPTER29 The Search for Order in an Era of Conservative America in the Ascent, Limits, 1973-1980 974 1980-1991 1012 qUOHTAG^/ Sales Limited fo i MALAGAS. ^CUSTOMER Why was the New Right able to ascend to national political power in the 1980s and reshape both government and society? Why did the social changes of the 1960s—such as civil rights, shifting gender roles, and challenges to the family—create both new opportunities and political clashes in the 1970s? ; Owen Franken/Getty Images Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Limits to Growth and Prosperity 976 Energy Crisis 977 Environmentalism 978 Economic Transformation and Decline 982 Urban Crisis and Suburban Revolt 985 The Rise of the New Right 1014 Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan: Champions of the Right 1015 Free-Market Economics and Religious Conservatism The Carter Presidency 1018 Politics in Flux, 1973-1980 988 Watergate and the Fall of a President 988 Jimmy Carter: The Outsider in Washington The Dawning of the Conservative Age The Reagan Coalition 1021 Conservatives in Power 1023 Morning in America 1027 991 Reform and Reaction in the 1970s 993 Civil Rights in a New Era 993 The Womens Movement and Gay Rights 994 After the Warren Court 998 The American Family Under Stress 999 Working Families in the Age of Deindustrialization 999 Navigating the Sexual Revolution 1001 Religion in the 1970s: The New Evangelicalism 1003 CHAPTER 28 REVIEW 1006 xxviii The End of the Cold War 1034 U.S.-Soviet Relations in a New Era 1034 A New Political Order at Home and Abroad
CHAPTER 29 REVIEW 986 1039 7044 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Personal Computing: A Technological Revolution COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Conservative Was the Reagan Presidency? THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Environmental Movement: Reimagining the Human-Earth Relationship 980 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Economic Malaise in the Seventies 1021 1032 1040 1017
of the American Century, 1980 to the Present 1008 CHAPTER 30 National and Global Dilemmas, 1989 to the Present 1046 Why did the shape of American politics, economics, and society shift in response to post-Cold War globalization? Raphael GAILLARDE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images America in the Global Economy 1049 The Rise of the European Union and China Globalization’s Rules and Rulers 1055 Revolutions in Technology 1057 1052 Politics and Partisanship in a Contentious Era 1059 DOCUMENTS An Increasingly Plural Society 1060 Clashes over “Family Values” 1064 Deepening Political Divisions 1067 Post-Cold War Foreign Policy 1070 The Declaration of Independence A New Century Dawns 1071 Domestic Conflict and War in the Middle East 1071 Environmental and Economic Crises 1076 From Liberal Reform to Conservative Nationalism 1077 CHAPTER 30 REVIEW D-1 : The Constitution of the United States of America D-4 Amendments to the Constitution (Including the Six Unratified Amendments) D-11 1085 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Globalization: Its Proponents and Its Discontents AMERICA IN THE WORLD Global Trade, 1960-2020 1053 Appendix A-1 1050 Glossary Index G-1 I-1 xxix |
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Contents Brief Contents i About the Cover Image Versions and Supplements xx Maps, Figures, and Tables vii Preface: Why This Book This Way Special Features xiv xxx xxxii PART 5 Consolidating a Continental Union, 1844-1877 (continued) CHAPTER 14 CHAPTER15 Reconstruction, Conquering a Continent, 1865-1877 484 1860-1890 518 •9 Why and how did the United States build a continental empire, and how did this affect people living in the West? Why did freedpeople. Republican policymakers, and ex-Confederates all end up dissatisfied with Reconstruction — or with its aftermath? To what degree did each group succeed in fulfilling its goals? Library of Congress. 3g04085 Library of Congress, LC-USZC4-973 487 Presidential Approaches: From Lincoln to Johnson Congress Versus the President 488 Radical Reconstruction 491 Womens Rights Denied 493 The Republican Economic Program The Struggle for National Reconstruction 496 The Quest for Land 496 Republican Governments in the South Building Black Communities 504 The Meaning of Freedom The Undoing of Reconstruction 500 505 The Republicans Unravel 506 Counterrevolution in the South 509 Reconstruction Rolled Back 511 The Political Crisis of 1877 512 Lasting Legacies 512 487 528 Mining Empires 529 From Bison to Cattle on the Plains Homesteaders 532 The First National Park 535 Incorporating the West 530 A Harvest of Blood: Native Peoples Dispossessed The Civil War and Indians on the Plains Grant’s Peace Policy 539 The End of Armed Resistance 543 Strategies of Survival 546 Western Myths and Realities 546 CHAPTER 15 REVIEW CHAPTER 14 REVIEW 521 The New
Union and the World 521 Integrating the National Economy 522 536 536 549 516 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS AMERICA IN THE WORLD How Rational Were the Great Railroad Empires? Labor Laws After Emancipation: Haiti and the United States 489 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Representing Indians 540 524 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN 514 The South's "Lost Cause" xxi
PART 6 Industrializing America: Upheavals and Experiments, CHAPTER 16 CHAPTER 17 Industrial America: Corporations and Conflicts, 1877-1911 554 Making Modern American Culture, Why did large corporations arise and thrive in late nineteenth century America, and how did they reshape trade, work, and politics? 1880-1917 584 ^^ hfCDR₽OR. A »tlHllftM ,^''л ' мм мга«яа . in uit · шам V/m, :«m t uw« м или. "Zf Why and how did Americans' identities, beliefs, and culture change in the early industrial era? ем· «ШЯ й»1 The Granger Collection Library of Congress, LC-DIG-ggbain-03008 Science and Faith The Rise of Big Business 587 Darwinism and Its Critics 587 Religion: Diversity and Innovation Realism in the Arts 593 557 Innovators in Enterprise 557 The Corporate Workplace 561 On the Shop Floor 562 Commerce and Culture Immigrants, East and West 568 Newcomers from Europe 569 Asian Americans and Exclusion 573 Labor Gets Organized 574 The Emergence of a Labor Movement 574 The Knights of Labor 577 Farmers and Workers: The Cooperative Alliance 578 Another Path: The American Federation of Labor 580 CHAPTER 16 REVIEW 589 595 Consumer Spaces 596 Masculinity and the Rise of Sports The Great Outdoors 601 Women, Men, and the Solitude of Self 603 Changing Families 603 Expanding Opportunities for Education Womens Civic Activism 607 CHAPTER 17 REVIEW 582 598 615 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Poverty and Food 564 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Christianity in the United States and Japan AMERICA IN THE WORLD Emigrantsand Destinations, 1881-1915 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN WCTU Women "Do Everything" 608 xxii 570 604
591
1877-1917 550 CHAPTER 18 CHAPTER 19 "Civilization's Inferno": The Rise and Reform of Industrial Cities, 1880-1917 616 Whose Government? Politics, Populists, Why and how did the rise of big cities shape American society and politics? Why and how did Progressive Era reformers seek to address the problems of industrial America, and to what extent did they succeed? * and Progressives, 1880-1917 646 ‘=* Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mellon, National Gallery of Art. Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington The New Metropolis 618 The Landscape of the Industrial City 619 Newcomers and Neighborhoods 621 City Cultures 624 Governing the Great City 629 Urban Political Machines 629 The Limits of Machine Government Crucibles of Progressive Reform 634 CHAPTER 18 REVIEW 637 649 Electoral Politics After Reconstruction The Populist Program 656 649 The Political Earthquakes of the 1890s 659 Depression and Reaction 659 Democrats and the “Solid South” 660 Republicans Retake National Control 662 Theodore Roosevelt as President Diverse Progressive Goals 668 The Election of 1912 672 Wilson’s Reforms, 1913-1917 645 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Power and Appeal of the Ward Boss Reform Visions, 1880-1892 Reform Reshaped, 1901-1912 635 Fighting Dirt and Vice 636 The Movement for Social Settlements Cities and National Politics 642 Library of Congress, 1 $09215 666 666 674 Economic Reforms 674 Progressive Legacies 677 631 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did Urban Progressive Reformers Approach Environmentalism? 638 CHAPTER 19 REVIEW 678 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Making Modern Presidents 650
COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS Were the "Gilded Age" and "Progressive Era" Separate Periods? 654 xxiii
PART 7 Global Ambitions and Domestic Turmoil, 680 1890-1945 CHAPTER 20 CHAPTER 21 An Emerging World Power, Unsettled Prosperity: From War to Depression, 1919-1932 7i6 1890-1918 684 Why did the United States become a major power on the world stage by the 1910s, and what impact did this have at home and abroad? Bettmann/Getty Images Picture Research Consultants Archives From Expansion to Imperialism Foundations of Empire The War of 1898 688 Spoils of War 691 687 687 A Power Among Powers 692 The Open Door in Asia 693 The United States and Latin America The United States in World War I From Neutrality to War 697 “Over There” 699 War on the Home Front 702 710 The Fate of Wilson’s Ideas 711 Congress Rejects the Treaty 713 719 The Red Scare 719 Racial Backlash 721 American Business at Home and Abroad 722 Government and Business Entangled 724 Making a Modern Consumer Economy 694 697 Postwar Abundance 724 Consumer Culture 726 The Automobile and Suburbanization 724 728 732 Women in a New Age 732 Culture Wars 736 The Harlem Renaissance 740 The Coming of the Great Depression From Boom to Bust 744 The Depressions Early Years 715 AMERICA IN THE WORLD The Human Cost ofWorld War I Resurgent Conservatism The Politics and Culture of a Diversifying Nation Catastrophe at Versailles CHAPTER 20 REVIEW Why did cultural and political conflict erupt in the 1920s, and what factors led to the Great Depression? CHAPTER 21 REVIEW 744 746 748 703 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN German Americans in World War I 706 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Automobile Transforms America 729 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did
Immigrants Experience America at theTurn of the Century? 734 xxiv
CHAPTER 22 CHAPTER 23 Managing the Great Depression, The World at War, Forging the New Deal, 1929-1938 750 1937-1945 786 Why and how did World War II transform the United States domestically and internationally? Why did the New Deal change the role of government in American life, and what were the economic and social consequences? Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images Early Responses to the Depression, 1929-1932 Crisis Management Under Hoover Rising Discontent 754 The 1932 Election 756 The New Deal Arrives, 1933-1935 753 753 804 Mobilizing for War at Home 804 Migration and the Wartime City 805 Japanese Removal 809 769 Fighting and Winning the War 811 Wartime Aims and Tensions 811 The War in Europe 812 The War in the Pacific 816 The Atomic Bomb, the Soviet Threat, and the End of the War 817 The Toll of the War 821 785 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Economic Nationalism in the United States and Mexico THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The New Deal and Public Works 722 798 Life on the Home Front 765 A More Inclusive Democracy 771 Reshaping the Environment 779 The New Deal and the Arts 783 The Legacies of the New Deal 783 CHAPTER 22 REVIEW 794 796 Financing the War 796 Mobilizing the American Fighting Force Workers and the War Effort 799 Politics in Wartime 803 The Second New Deal and the Redefining of Liberalism, 1935-1938 764 The New Deal and American Society 789 The Rise of Fascism 789 War Approaches 791 The Attack on Pearl Harbor Organizing for a Global War 757 The First Hundred Days 757 The New Deal Under Attack 761 The Welfare State
Comes into Being From Reform to Stalemate 766 The Road to War 770 CHAPTER 23 REVIEW 822 AMERICA IN THE WORLD The Scales of War: Losses and Gains During World Warll 797 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Mobilizing the Home Front 806 XXV
PART 8 The Modern State and the Age of Liberalism, 824 1945-1980 CHAPTER 24 CHAPTER 25 The Cold War Dawns, Triumph of the Middle Class, 1945-1963 828 1945-1963 866 Why did the international rivalry of the Cold War create a climate of fear at home and how did it affect politics and society in the United States? swin ink 2/Corbis via Getty Images Containment in a Divided World Justin Locke/National Geographic/Getty Images Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society 833 Origins of the Cold War 833 The Containment Strategy 836 Containment in Asia 842 Economy: From Recovery to Dominance A Nation of Consumers 872 Youth Culture 877 Religion and the Middle Class 880 Cold War Liberalism 848 Truman and the End of Reform 848 Red Scare: The Hunt for Communists 851 Modern Republicanism and the Liberal State The Modern Nuclear Family 881 The Baby Boom 881 Women, Work, and Family 883 Challenging Middle-Class Morality 854 Cold War in the Postcolonial World 855 Colonial Independence Movements 856 John F. Kennedy and Renewed East-West Tensions Making a Commitment in Vietnam 863 CHAPTER 24 REVIEW Why did consumer culture become such a fixture of American life in the postwar decades, and how did it affect politics and society? 860 886 The Postwar Housing Boom 886 Rise of the Sunbelt 891 Two Societies: Urban and Suburban 865 CHAPTER 25 REVIEW COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Did Cold War Interventions Differ Worldwide? THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Global Cold War 838 xxvi 884 A Suburban Nation 831 897 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Postwar Capitalism 873 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Cold War America
Suburb 888 893 869 868
CHAPTER 26 CHAPTER 27 The Civil Rights Movement, Liberal Crisis and Conservative 1941-1973 898 Rebirth, 1961-1972 936 IL Private Collection/Peter Newark American Pictures/Bridgeman Images AP Photo The Emerging Civil Rights Struggle, 1941-1957 Life Under Jim Crow 901 Roots of the Civil Rights Movement 902 World War II: The Beginnings 903 Cold War Civil Rights 905 Mexican Americans and Japanese Americans Fighting for Equality Before the Law 909 Forging a Protest Movement, 1955-1965 Nonviolent Direct Action 912 Legislating Civil Rights, 1963-1965 901 Liberalism at High Tide 938 John F. Kennedy’s Promise 939 Lyndon B. Johnson and the Great Society Rebirth of the Womens Movement 944 940 The Vietnam War Begins 948 Escalation Under Johnson 949 Public Opinion and the War 951 The Student Movement 954 907 912 Days of Rage, 1968-1972 917 Widening Demands for Equality, 1966-1973 925 Black Nationalism 925 Urban Unrest 929 Rise of the Chicano Movement 931 The American Indian Movement 932 CHAPTER 26 REVIEW Why did debates over liberal values in the 1960s lead to social conflict and divide the country? Why did the civil rights movement change over time, and how did competing ideas and strategies evolve within the movement itself? 957 War Abroad, Tragedy at Home 957 Rising Political Radicalism 959 Womens Liberation and Black and Chicana Feminism Stonewall and Gay Liberation 964 962 Rise of the Silent Majority 965 Nixon in Vietnam 965 The Silent Majority Speaks Out 968 The 1972 Election 970 934 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS Was Martin Luther King Jr. a Radical or a Reformer? 915 THINKING LIKE A
HISTORIAN Civil Rights and Black Power: Strategy and Ideology 920 CHAPTER 27 REVIEW 972 COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS What Are the Origins of 1960s Feminism? 946 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Debating the War in Vietnam 952 xxvii
H PART 9 Globalization and the End PART 8 (continued) CHAPTER 28 CHAPTER29 The Search for Order in an Era of Conservative America in the Ascent, Limits, 1973-1980 974 1980-1991 1012 qUOHTAG^/ Sales Limited fo i MALAGAS. ^CUSTOMER Why was the New Right able to ascend to national political power in the 1980s and reshape both government and society? Why did the social changes of the 1960s—such as civil rights, shifting gender roles, and challenges to the family—create both new opportunities and political clashes in the 1970s? ; Owen Franken/Getty Images Ronald Reagan Presidential Library Limits to Growth and Prosperity 976 Energy Crisis 977 Environmentalism 978 Economic Transformation and Decline 982 Urban Crisis and Suburban Revolt 985 The Rise of the New Right 1014 Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan: Champions of the Right 1015 Free-Market Economics and Religious Conservatism The Carter Presidency 1018 Politics in Flux, 1973-1980 988 Watergate and the Fall of a President 988 Jimmy Carter: The Outsider in Washington The Dawning of the Conservative Age The Reagan Coalition 1021 Conservatives in Power 1023 Morning in America 1027 991 Reform and Reaction in the 1970s 993 Civil Rights in a New Era 993 The Womens Movement and Gay Rights 994 After the Warren Court 998 The American Family Under Stress 999 Working Families in the Age of Deindustrialization 999 Navigating the Sexual Revolution 1001 Religion in the 1970s: The New Evangelicalism 1003 CHAPTER 28 REVIEW 1006 xxviii The End of the Cold War 1034 U.S.-Soviet Relations in a New Era 1034 A New Political Order at Home and Abroad
CHAPTER 29 REVIEW 986 1039 7044 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Personal Computing: A Technological Revolution COMPARING INTERPRETATIONS How Conservative Was the Reagan Presidency? THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN The Environmental Movement: Reimagining the Human-Earth Relationship 980 AMERICA IN THE WORLD Economic Malaise in the Seventies 1021 1032 1040 1017
of the American Century, 1980 to the Present 1008 CHAPTER 30 National and Global Dilemmas, 1989 to the Present 1046 Why did the shape of American politics, economics, and society shift in response to post-Cold War globalization? Raphael GAILLARDE/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images America in the Global Economy 1049 The Rise of the European Union and China Globalization’s Rules and Rulers 1055 Revolutions in Technology 1057 1052 Politics and Partisanship in a Contentious Era 1059 DOCUMENTS An Increasingly Plural Society 1060 Clashes over “Family Values” 1064 Deepening Political Divisions 1067 Post-Cold War Foreign Policy 1070 The Declaration of Independence A New Century Dawns 1071 Domestic Conflict and War in the Middle East 1071 Environmental and Economic Crises 1076 From Liberal Reform to Conservative Nationalism 1077 CHAPTER 30 REVIEW D-1 : The Constitution of the United States of America D-4 Amendments to the Constitution (Including the Six Unratified Amendments) D-11 1085 THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Globalization: Its Proponents and Its Discontents AMERICA IN THE WORLD Global Trade, 1960-2020 1053 Appendix A-1 1050 Glossary Index G-1 I-1 xxix |
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author | Edwards, Rebecca 1966- Hinderaker, Eric Self, Robert O. 1968- |
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illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T23:32:00Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-20T04:35:51Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781319275891 |
language | English |
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spelling | Edwards, Rebecca 1966- Verfasser (DE-588)132020467 aut America's history Volume 2 Since 1865 Rebecca Edwards, Eric Hinderaker, Robert O. Self, James A. Henretta Boston ; New York Bedford/St. Martin's 2021 1 Band (verschiedene Seitenzählungen) Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Hinderaker, Eric Verfasser (DE-588)1191289869 aut Self, Robert O. 1968- Verfasser (DE-588)102595212X aut (DE-604)BV049580225 2 Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034925181&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Edwards, Rebecca 1966- Hinderaker, Eric Self, Robert O. 1968- America's history |
title | America's history |
title_auth | America's history |
title_exact_search | America's history |
title_exact_search_txtP | America's history |
title_full | America's history Volume 2 Since 1865 Rebecca Edwards, Eric Hinderaker, Robert O. Self, James A. Henretta |
title_fullStr | America's history Volume 2 Since 1865 Rebecca Edwards, Eric Hinderaker, Robert O. Self, James A. Henretta |
title_full_unstemmed | America's history Volume 2 Since 1865 Rebecca Edwards, Eric Hinderaker, Robert O. Self, James A. Henretta |
title_short | America's history |
title_sort | america s history since 1865 |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034925181&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV049580225 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT edwardsrebecca americashistoryvolume2 AT hinderakereric americashistoryvolume2 AT selfroberto americashistoryvolume2 |