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Give Me Liberty! Seagull 7th Edition (Combined Volume) by Eric Foner, ISBN-13: 978-1324041207

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Description

Give Me Liberty! Seagull 7th Edition (Combined Volume) by Eric Foner, ISBN-13: 978-1324041207

[PDF eBook eTextbook]

  • Publisher: ‎ W. W. Norton & Company; Seagull Seventh edition (December 15, 2022)
  • Language: ‎ English
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 132404120X
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 978-1324041207

The Seagull Edition offers the complete text of the Full Edition in full color and a portable trim size with fewer illustrations and maps and an exceptionally low price.

The #1 U.S. history text with inclusive new coverage and improved support for student readers.

Give Me Liberty! is beloved by instructors and students alike because it delivers an authoritative, concise, and integrated American history. In the Seventh Edition, Eric Foner welcomes acclaimed scholars Kathleen DuVal and Lisa McGirr as co-authors. Together, they have enhanced coverage of Native American history with an emphasis on how it refines our understanding of freedom―the book’s urgent guiding theme. New pedagogical tools, including a guided interactive reading experience with support in developing critical thinking skills, are designed to help students get the most out of this beloved text.

Table of Contents:

Cover

Half-title Page

Physical/Political Map of The United States

Political Map of The World

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Contents

List of Maps, Tables, and Figures

About the Authors

Preface

Resources For Students And Instructors

Chapter 1: Old Worlds and New

An Old World: North America

An Old World: West Africa

An Old World: Western Europe

Contact

The Spanish Empire

The French and Dutch Empires

Chapter Review

Chapter 2: European Colonies and Native Nations, 1600–1660

England and the Americas

Early English Exploration and Colonization

The Chesapeake

Origins of American Slavery

The New England Way

New Englanders Divided

Religion, Politics, and Freedom

Chapter Review

Chapter 3: Creating Anglo-America, 1660–1750

Global Competition and the Expansion of England’s Empire

Entrenchment of American Slavery

Colonies in Crisis

The Growth of Colonial America

Social Classes in the British Colonies

North America at Mid-Century

Chapter Review

Chapter 4: Slavery, Freedom, and the Struggle for Empire to 1763

Slavery and Empire

Slave Cultures and Slave Resistance

An Empire of Freedom

The Public Sphere

The Great Awakening

Imperial Rivalries

Battle for the Continent

Chapter Review

Chapter 5: The American Revolution, 1763–1783

The Crisis Begins

The Road to Revolution

The Coming of Independence

Securing Independence

Chapter Review

Chapter 6: The Revolution Within

Democratizing Freedom

Toward Religious Toleration

Defining Economic Freedom

The Limits of Liberty

Slavery and the Revolution

Daughters of Liberty

Chapter Review

Chapter 7: Founding a Nation, 1783–1791

America Under the Confederation

A New Constitution

The Ratification Debate and the Origin of the Bill of Rights

“We the People”

Chapter Review

Chapter 8: Securing the Republic, 1791–1815

Politics in an Age of Passion

The Adams Presidency

Jefferson in Power

The “Second War of Independence”

Chapter Review

Chapter 9: The Market Revolution, 1800–1840

A New Economy

The Rise of the West

Market Society

The Free Individual

The Limits of Prosperity

Chapter Review

Chapter 10: Democracy in America, 1815–1840

The Triumph of Democracy

Nationalism and Its Discontents

Nation, Section, and Party

The Age of Jackson

Indian Removal

The Bank War and After

Chapter Review

Chapter 11: The Peculiar Institution

The Old South

Life Under Slavery

Slave Culture

Resistance to Slavery

Chapter Review

Chapter 12: An Age of Reform, 1820–1840

The Reform Impulse

The Crusade Against Slavery

Black and White Abolitionism

The Origins of Feminism

Chapter Review

Chapter 13: A House Divided, 1840–1861

Fruits of Manifest Destiny

A Dose of Arsenic

The Rise of the Republican Party

The Emergence of Lincoln

The Impending Crisis

Chapter Review

Chapter 14: A New Birth of Freedom: The Civil War, 1861–1865

The First Modern War

The Coming of Emancipation

The Second American Revolution

The Confederate Nation

Turning Points

Rehearsals for Reconstruction and the End of the War

Chapter Review

Chapter 15: “What Is Freedom?”: Reconstruction

The Meaning of Freedom

The Making of Radical Reconstruction

Radical Reconstruction in the South

The Overthrow of Reconstruction

Chapter Review

Chapter 16: America’s Gilded Age, 1870–1890

The Second Industrial Revolution

Freedom in the Gilded Age

Labor and the Republic

The Transformation of the West

Politics in a Gilded Age

Chapter Review

Chapter 17: Freedom’s Boundaries, at Home and Abroad, 1890–1900

The Populist Challenge

The Segregated South

Redrawing the Boundaries

Becoming a World Power

Chapter Review

Chapter 18: The Progressive Era, 1900–1916

An Urban Age and a Consumer Society

Varieties of Progressivism

The Politics of Progressivism

The Progressive Presidents

Chapter Review

Chapter 19: Safe for Democracy: The United States and World War I

An Era of Intervention

America and the Great War

The War at Home

Who Is an American?

1919

Chapter Review

Chapter 20: From Business Culture to Great Depression: The Twenties, 1920–1932

The Business of America

Business and Government

The Birth of Civil Liberties

The Culture Wars

The Great Depression

Chapter Review

Chapter 21: The New Deal, 1932–1940

The First New Deal

The Grassroots Revolt

The Second New Deal

A Reckoning With Liberty

The Limits of Change

A New Conception of America

Chapter Review

Chapter 22: Fighting for the Four Freedoms: World War II, 1941–1945

Fighting World War II

The Home Front

Visions of Postwar Freedom

The American Dilemma

The End of the War

Chapter Review

Chapter 23: The United States and the Cold War, 1945–1953

Origins of the Cold War

The Cold War and the Idea of Freedom

The Truman Presidency

The Anticommunist Crusade

Chapter Review

Chapter 24: An Affluent Society, 1953–1960

The Golden Age

The Eisenhower Era

The Freedom Movement

The Election of 1960

Chapter Review

Chapter 25: The Sixties, 1960–1968

The Civil Rights Revolution

The Kennedy Years

Lyndon Johnson’s Presidency

The Changing Black Movement

Vietnam and the New Left

The New Movements and the Rights Revolution

1968

Chapter Review

Chapter 26: The Conservative Turn, 1969–1988

President Nixon

Grassroots Rights Movements

Foreign Policy and Watergate

The End of the Golden Age

The Rising Tide of Conservatism

The Reagan Revolution

Chapter Review

Chapter 27: A New World Order, 1989–2004

The Post–Cold War World

Globalization and Its Discontents

Culture Wars

Impeachment and the Election of 2000

The Attacks of September 11

The War on Terrorism

An American Empire?

The Aftermath of September 11 at Home

Chapter Review

Chapter 28: A Divided Nation

The Winds of Change

The Great Recession

Obama in Office

The Obama Presidency

President Trump

2020: Year of Crisis

Freedom in the Twenty-First Century

Chapter Review

Suggested Reading

The Declaration of Independence (1776)

The Constitution of The United States (1787)

Glossary

Credits

Index

Eric Foner is DeWitt Clinton Professor Emeritus of History at Columbia University. In his teaching and scholarship, he focuses on the Civil War and Reconstruction, slavery, and nineteenth-century America. He has served as president of the Organization of American Historians and the American Historical Association. In 2006, he received the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching from Columbia University. His most recent books are The Fiery Trial: Abraham Lincoln and American Slavery, winner of the Bancroft and Lincoln Prizes and the Pulitzer Prize for History; Gateway to Freedom: The Hidden History of the Underground Railroad, winner of the New York Historical Society Book Prize; and The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution.

Kathleen DuVal is Bowman and Gordon Gray Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she teaches early American history. Her research focuses on how various Native American, European, and African people interacted from the sixteenth through the early nineteenth centuries. Her most recent book, Independence Lost: Lives on the Edge of the American Revolution, won multiple awards for its rich retelling of the history of the Revolutionary Era as experienced by enslaved people, Native Americans, and women living on Florida’s Gulf coast. DuVal has also won the Guggenheim Fellowship in the Humanities, a National Humanities Center Fellowship, and a postdoctoral fellowship from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. She is also an Elected Fellow for the American Antiquarian Society and the Society of American Historians.

Lisa McGirr is Professor of History at Harvard University, where she specializes in the history of the twentieth-century United States. Her research and teaching interests bridge the fields of social and political history and focus on collective action, state building, reform movements, and politics. Her most recent book, The War on Alcohol: Prohibition and the Rise of the American State, won acclaim for excavating the significant but neglected state-building legacies of national Prohibition. Her award-winning first book, Suburban Warriors: The Origins of the New American Right, investigated the social and regional basis of grassroots conservative politics in the post–World War II United States. She teaches a wide variety of courses on the history of the United States in the twentieth century.

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