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Exploring American Histories Volume 2: A Survey with Sources 3rd Edition by Nancy A. Hewitt, ISBN-13: 978-1319106423

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Exploring American Histories Volume 2: A Survey with Sources 3rd Edition by Nancy A. Hewitt, ISBN-13: 978-1319106423

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  • Publisher: ‎ Bedford/St. Martin’s; Third edition (January 4, 2019)
  • Language: ‎ English
  • 720 pages
  • ISBN-10: ‎ 1319106420
  • ISBN-13: ‎ 978-1319106423

Exploring American Histories opens an entirely new window into the many histories of the nation’s past. It integrates an unprecedented number of primary and secondary sources―both written and visual―in a unique building blocks approach that enables students to hone their analysis skills while they actively learn the fundamental concepts of American history. By weaving sources into the story and culminating in multi-source projects organized around a single topic at the end of each chapter, the book brings history to life while helping students understand how sources form the basis of historical narratives and how to think critically about them.

Table of Contents:

Guide to Analyzing Primary Sources
United States Map
Preface
Versions and Supplements
Maps, Figures, and Tables
How to Use This Book
14 Emancipation and Reconstruction
1863–1877
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Jefferson Franklin Long and Andrew Johnson
Emancipation
African Americans Embrace Freedom
Reuniting Families Torn Apart by Slavery
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 14.1 Freedpeople Petition for Land, 1865
Freedom to Learn
Freedom to Worship and the Leadership Role of Black Churches
National Reconstruction
Abraham Lincoln Plans for Reunification
Andrew Johnson and Presidential Reconstruction
Johnson and Congressional Resistance
Congressional Reconstruction
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Debating the Freedmen’s Bureau
Source 14.2 Colonel Eliphalet Whittlesey, Report on the
Freedman’s Bureau, 1865
Source 14.3 Democratic Flier Opposing the Freedman’s
Bureau Bill, 1866
The Struggle for Universal Suffrage
Remaking the South
Whites Reconstruct the South
Black Political Participation and Economic Opportunities
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Race and Reconstruction
Source 14.4 William A. Dunning, Radical Reconstruction
(1907)
Source 14.5 John Hope Franklin, The South’s New Leaders
(1961)
White Resistance to Congressional Reconstruction
The Unraveling of Reconstruction
The Republican Retreat
Congressional and Judicial Retreat
The Presidential Compromise of 1876
Conclusion: The Legacies of Reconstruction
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 14
Testing and Contesting Freedom
Source 14.6 Mississippi Black Code, 1865
Source 14.7 Richard H. Cain, Federal Aid for Land Purchase,
1868
Source 14.8 Willis B. Bocock and Black Laborers, Sharecropping
Agreement, 1870
Source 14.9 Ellen Parton, Testimony on Klan Violence, 1871
Source 14.10 Thomas Nast, Colored Rule in a Reconstructed (?)
State, 1874
15 The West
1865–1896
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Annie Oakley and Geronimo
Opening the West
The Great Plains
Federal Policy and Foreign Investment
Indians and Resistance to Expansion
Indian Civilizations
Changing Federal Policy toward Indians
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 15.1 Buffalo Hunting, c. 1875
Indian Defeat
Reforming Indian Policy
Indian Assimilation and Resistance
The Mining and Lumber Industries
The Business of Mining
Life in the Mining Towns
The Lumber Boom
The Cattle Industry and Commercial Farming
The Life of the Cowboy
The Rise of Commercial Ranching
Commercial Farming
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Cowboy Myths and Realities
Source 15.2 Poster Advertising Buffalo Bill’s Wild West
Show, 1893
Source 15.3 George C. Duffield, Diary of a Real Cowboy,
1866
Women Homesteaders
Farming on the Great Plains
Diversity in the Far West
Mormons
Californios
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Significance of the Frontier
Source 15.4 Frederick Jackson Turner, The Significance of
the Frontier in American History, 1893
Source 15.5 Patricia Nelson Limerick, Deemphasizing the
Concept of the Frontier, 1987
The Chinese
Conclusion: The Ambiguous Legacy of the West
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 15
American Indians and Whites in the West
Source 15.6 James Michael Cavanaugh, Support for Indian
Extermination, 1868
Source 15.7 Helen Hunt Jackson, Challenges to Indian Policy,
1881
Source 15.8 Thomas Nast, “Patience until the Indian Is Civilized
—So to Speak,” 1878
Source 15.9 Zitkala-Ša, Life at an Indian Boarding School, 1921
Source 15.10 Chief Joseph, Views on Indian Affairs, 1879
16 Industrial America
1877–1900
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Andrew Carnegie and John Sherman
America Industrializes
The New Industrial Economy
Innovation and Inventions
Building a New South
Industrial Consolidation
The Growth of Corporations
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 16.1 Horace Taylor, What a Funny Little
Government, 1900
Laissez-Faire, Social Darwinism, and Their Critics
The Doctrines of Success
Challenges to Laissez-Faire
Society and Culture in the Gilded Age
Wealthy and Middle-Class Leisure-Time Pursuits
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Leisure-Class Women
Source 16.2 The Delineator, 1900
Source 16.3 Alice Austen and Trude Eccleston, 1891
Changing Gender Roles
Black America and Jim Crow
National Politics in the Era of Industrialization
The Weak Presidency
Congressional Inefficiency
The Business of Politics
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Robber Baron or Captain of Industry?
Source 16.4 Matthew Josephson, The Robber Barons, 1934
Source 16.5 Ron Chernow, John D. Rockefeller, Industrial
Statesman, 1998
An Energized and Entertained Electorate
Conclusion: Industrial America
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 16
Debates about Laissez-Faire
Source 16.6 William Graham Sumner, A Defense of Laissez-Faire,
1883
Source 16.7 Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward, 2000–1887,
1888
Source 16.8 Andrew Carnegie, The Gospel of Wealth, 1889
Source 16.9 Henry Demarest Lloyd, Critique of Wealth, 1894
17 Workers and Farmers in the Age of Organization
1877–1900
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
John McLuckie and Mary Elizabeth Lease
Working People Organize
The Industrialization of Labor
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 17.1 John Morrison, Testimony on the Impact of
Mechanization, 1883
Organizing Unions
Clashes between Workers and Owners
Working-Class Leisure in Industrial America
Farmers Organize
Farmers Unite
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Farmers and Workers Organize: Two Views
Source 17.2 Walter Huston, Here Lies Prosperity, 1895
Source 17.3 Populist Party Platform, 1892
Populists Rise Up
The Depression of the 1890s
Depression Politics
Political Realignment in the Election of 1896
The Decline of the Populists
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Agrarian Myth and Populism
Source 17.4 Richard Hofstadter, The Agrarian Myth, 1955
Source 17.5 Charles Postel, The Populist Vision, 2007
Conclusion: A Passion for Organization
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 17
The Pullman Strike of 1894
Source 17.6 George Pullman, Testimony before the U.S. Strike
Commission, 1894
Source 17.7 Eugene V. Debs, On Radicalism, 1902
Source 17.8 Jennie Curtis, Testimony before the U.S. Strike
Commission, 1894
Source 17.9 Report from the Commission to Investigate the
Chicago Strike, 1895
18 Cities, Immigrants, and the Nation
1880–1914
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Beryl Lassin and Maria Vik Takacs
A New Wave of Immigrants
Immigrants Arrive from Many Lands
Creating Immigrant Communities
Hostility toward Recent Immigrants
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 18.1 Anzia Yerzierska, Immigrant Fathers and
Daughters, 1925
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The Chinese in America
Source 18.2 Saum Song Bo, “A Chinese View of the Statue
of Liberty”1885
Source 18.3 Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 1886
The Assimilation Dilemma
Becoming an Urban Nation
The New Industrial City
Expand Upward and Outward
How the Other Half Lived
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Immigration, Nativism, and Whiteness
Source 18.4 John Higham, Nativism and Race, 1955
Source 18.5 Katherine Benton-Cohen, Nativism, Mexicans,
and Whitness, 2009
Urban Politics at the Turn of the Century
Political Machines and City Bosses
Urban Reformers
Conclusion: A Nation of Cities
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 18
“Melting Pot” or “Vegetable Soup”?
Source 18.6 Israel Zangwill, The Melting-Pot, 1908
Source 18.7 “The Mortar of Assimilation—and the One Element
That Won’t Mix,” 1889
Source 18.8 “Be Just—Even to John Chinaman,” 1893
Source 18.9 Alfred P. Schultz, The Mongrelization of America,
1908
Source 18.10 Randolph S. Bourne, Trans-national America, 1916
19 Progressivism and the Search for Order
1900–1917
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Gifford Pinchot and Geneva Stratton-Porter
The Roots of Progressivism
Progressive Origins
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 19.1 Walter Rauschenbusch, Christianity and the
Social Crisis, 1907
Muckrakers
Humanitarian and Social Justice Reform
Female Progressives and the Poor
Fighting for Women’s Suffrage
Progressivism and African Americans
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Addressing Racial Inequality
Source 19.2 Booker T. Washington, The Atlanta
Compromise, 1895
Source 19.3 Ida B. Wells, A Critique of Booker T.
Washington, 1904
Progressivism and Indians
Morality and Social Control
Prohibition
Prostitution, Narcotics, and Juvenile Delinquency
Birth Control
Immigration Restriction
Good Government Progressivism
Municipal and State Reform
Conservation and Preservation of the Environment
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Progressivism in White and Black
Source 19.4 C. Vann Woodward, Progressivism for Whites
Only, 1951
Source 19.5 Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, Southern Black
Women and Progressivism, 1996
Presidential Progressivism
Theodore Roosevelt and the Square Deal
Taft Retreats from Progressivism
The Election of 1912
Woodrow Wilson and the New Freedom Agenda
Conclusion: The Progressive Legacy
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 19
Muller v. Oregon, 1908
Source 19.6 Theodore Roosevelt, “On American Motherhood,”
1905
Source 19.7 William D. Fenton and Henry H. Gilfry, Brief for
Plaintiff in Error, Muller v. Oregon, 1907
Source 19.8 Louis D. Brandeis, Brief for Defendant in Error,
Muller v. Oregon, 1908
Source 19.9 David J. Brewer, Opinion in Muller v. Oregon, 1908
Source 19.10 Louisa Dana Haring, Letter, “Equality before the
Law,” 1908
20 Empire and Wars
1898–1918
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Alfred Thayer Mahan and José Martí
The Awakening of Imperialism
The Economics of Expansion
Cultural Justifications for Imperialism
Gender and Empire
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 20.1 Rudyard Kipling, “The White Man’s Burden,”
1899
The War with Spain
Revolution in Cuba
The War of 1898
The Pacification of Cuba
The Philippine War
Extending U.S. Imperialism, 1899–1913
Theodore Roosevelt and “Big Stick” Diplomacy
Opening the Door in China
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Fighting in the Philippines
Source 20.2 President McKinley Defends His Decision
Source 20.3 William Carson, “A Bigger Job Than He
Thought For,” 1899
Wilson and American Foreign Policy, 1912–1917
Diplomacy and War
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The U.S. Chooses to Enter World War I
Source 20.4 Arthur S. Link, Woodrow Wilson and Neutrality,
1963
Source 20.5 John Whiteclay Chambers II, Woodrow
Wilson’s Unneutral Neutrality, 2000
Making the World Safe for Democracy
Fighting the War at Home
Government by Commission
Winning Hearts and Minds
Waging Peace
The Failure of Ratification
Conclusion: A U.S. Empire
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 20
Imperialism versus Anti-Imperialism
Source 20.6 The Hawaiian Memorial, 1897
Source 20.7 Albert Beveridge, The March of the Flag, 1898
Source 20.8 “There’s Plenty of Room at the Table,” 1906
Source 20.9 Anti-Imperialism Letter, 1899
21 The Twenties
1919–1929
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
D. C. Stephenson and Ossian Sweet
Social Turmoil
The Red Scare, 1919–1920
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 21.1 A. Mitchell Palmer, The Case against the Reds,
1920
Racial Violence in the Postwar Era
Prosperity, Consumption, and Growth
Government Promotion of the Economy
Americans Become Consumers
Urbanization
Perilous Prosperity
Challenges to Social Conventions
Breaking with the Old Morality
The Harlem Renaissance
Marcus Garvey and Black Nationalism
Culture Wars
Prohibition
Nativists versus Immigrants
Resurrection of the Ku Klux Klan
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Men and Women of the KKK
Source 21.2 Gerald W. Johnson, The Ku Kluxer, 1924
Source 21.3 Women of the Ku Klux Klan, 1927
Fundamentalism versus Modernism
Politics and the Fading of Prosperity
The Battle for the Soul of the Democratic Party
Lingering Progressivism
Financial Crash
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Impact of Prohibition
Source 21.4 Andrew Sinclair, The Excesses of Prohibition,
1962
Source 21.5 Lisa McGirr, The National State and Crime
Control, 2016
Conclusion: The Transitional Twenties
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 21
The New Negro and the Harlem Renaissance
Source 21.6 A. Philip Randolph and Chandler Owen, “The New
Negro—What Is He?” 1919
Source 21.7 Claude McKay, “If We Must Die,” 1919
Source 21.8 Langston Hughes, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,”
1921
Source 21.9 Aaron Douglas, Illustration, The New Negro, 1925
Source 21.10 Bessie Smith, “Down-Hearted Blues,” 1923
22 Depression, Dissent, and the New Deal
1929–1940
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Eleanor Roosevelt and Luisa Moreno
The Great Depression
Hoover Faces the Depression
Hoovervilles and Dust Storms
Challenges for Minorities
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 22.1 Plea from the Scottsboro Prisoners, 1932
Families under Strain
Organized Protest
The New Deal
Roosevelt Restores Confidence
Steps toward Recovery
Direct Assistance and Relief
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Letters to Eleanor Roosevelt
Source 22.2 Mildred Isbell to Mrs. Roosevelt, January 1,
1936
Source 22.3 Minnie Harden to Mrs. Roosevelt, December
14, 1937
New Deal Critics
The New Deal Moves to the Left
Expanding Relief Measures
Establishing Social Security
Organized Labor Strikes Back
A Half Deal for Minorities
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
New Deal or Raw Deal
Source 22.4 William E. Leuchtenburg, The Roosevelt
Reconstruction, 1963
Source 22.5 Barton J. Bernstein, The Conservative
Achievements of Liberal Reform, 1969
Decline of the New Deal
Conclusion: New Deal Liberalism
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 22
The Depression in Rural America
Source 22.6 Ann Marie Low, Dust Bowl Diary, 1934
Source 22.7 John P. Davis, A Black Inventory of the New Deal,
1935
Source 22.8 A Sharecropper’s Family in Washington County,
Arkansas, 1935
Source 22.9 Martin Torres, Protest Against Maltreatment of
Mexican Laborers in California, 1934
Source 22.10 Otis Nation, Testimony to the Great Plains
Committee, 1937
23 World War II
1933–1945
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
J. Robert Oppenheimer and Fred Korematsu
The Road toward War
The Growing Crisis in Europe
The Challenge to Isolationism
The United States Enters the War
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 23.1 Monica Sone, Memories of Pearl Harbor
The Home-Front Economy
Managing the Wartime Economy
New Opportunities for Women
Everyday Life on the Home Front
Fighting for Equality at Home
The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement
Struggles for Mexican Americans
American Indians
The Ordeal of Japanese Americans
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Japanese American Internment
Source 23.2 Charles Kikuchi, Internment Diary, 1942
Source 23.3 Justice Hugo Black, Korematsu v. United States,
1944
Global War
War in Europe
War in the Pacific
Ending the War
Evidence of the Holocaust
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Roosevelt Administration and the Holocaust
Source 23.4 David S. Wyman, FDR Abandoned the Jews,
1984
Source 23.5 Richard Breitman and Allan J. Lichtman, FDR
Did Not Abandon the Jews, 2013
Conclusion: The Impact of World War II
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 23
The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb
Source 23.6 Petition to the President of the United States, July
17, 1945
Source 23.7 President Harry S. Truman, Press Release on the
Atomic Bomb, August 6, 1945
Source 23.8 Hiroshima, August 6, 1945
Source 23.9 U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey, 1946
Source 23.10 Father Johannes Siemes, Eyewitness Account of
the Hiroshima Bombing, 1945
24 The Opening of the Cold War
1945–1961
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
George Kennan and Ethel Rosenberg
The Origins of the Cold War 1945–1947
Mutual Misunderstandings
The Truman Doctrine
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 24.1 Henry Wallace, The Way to Peace, 1946
The Marshall Plan and Economic Containment
The Cold War Hardens, 1948–1953
Military Containment
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The Marshall Plan and the Soviet Union
Source 24.2 George C. Marshall, The Marshall Plan, 1947
Source 24.3 Vyacheslav Molotov, Soviet Objections to the
Marshall Plan, 194
The Korean War
The Korean War and the Imperial Presidency
Combating Communism at Home, 1945–1954
Loyalty and the Second Red Scare
McCarthyism
The Cold War Expands, 1953–1961
Nuclear Weapons and Containment
Interventions in the Middle East, Latin America, and Africa
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Causes of the Cold War
Source 24.4 William Appleman Williams, Expanding the
Economic Open Door, 1959
Source 24.5 John Lewis Gaddis, Competing Ideologies,
1972
Early Intervention in Vietnam, 1954–1960
Conclusion: The Cold War and Anticommunism
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 24
McCarthyism and the Hollywood Ten
Source 24.6 Ronald Reagan, Testimony before HUAC, 1947
Source 24.7 John Howard Lawson, Testimony before HUAC,
1947
Source 24.8 The Waldorf Statement and the Introduction of the
Blacklist, 1947
Source 24.9 Herblock, “Fire!” 1949
Source 24.10 Lillian Hellman, Letter to HUAC, 1952
25 Troubled Innocence
1945–1961
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Alan Freed and Grace Metalious
Peacetime Transition and the Boom Years
Peacetime Challenges, 1945–1948
Economic Conversion and Labor Discontent
Truman, the New Deal Coalition, and the Election of 1948
Economic Boom
Baby Boom
Changes in Living Patterns
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 25.1 Adlai E. Stevenson, “A Purpose for Modern
Woman,”1955
The Culture of the 1950s
The Rise of Television
Wild Ones on the Big Screen
The Influence of Teenage Culture
The Lives of Women
Religious Revival
Beats and Other Nonconformists
The Growth of the Civil Rights Movement
The Rise of the Southern Civil Rights Movement
School Segregation and the Supreme Court
The Montgomery Bus Boycott
White Resistance to Desegregation
The Sit-Ins
The Civil Rights Movement and Minority Struggles in the West
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The Civil Rights Movement and Its Opponents
Source 25.2 The Southern Manifesto, 1956
Source 25.3 Ella Baker, “Bigger Than a Hamburger,”1960
Domestic Politics in the Eisenhower Era
Modern Republicanism
The Election of 1960
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
When Did the Civil Rights Movement Begin?
Source 25.4 Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, The Long Civil Rights
Movement, 2005 Source 25.5 Steven F. Lawson, The Short
Civil Rights Movement, 2011
Conclusion: Postwar Politics and Culture
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 25
Teenagers in Postwar America
Source 25.6 Dick Clark,Your Happiest Years, 1959
Source 25.7 Charlotte Jones, Letter on Elvis, 1957
Source 25.8 The Desegregation of Central High School, 1957
Source 25.9 Gloria Lopez-Stafford, A Mexican-American
Childhood in El Paso, Texas, 1949
Source 25.10 “Why No Chinese American Delinquents?” 1955
26 Liberalism and Its Challengers
1960–1973
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Earl Warren and Bayard Rustin
The Politics of Liberalism
Kennedy’s New Frontier
Kennedy, the Cold War, and Cuba
The Civil Rights Movement Intensifies, 1961–1968
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 26.1 Edmund Valtman, The Cuban Missile Crisis,
1962
Freedom Rides
Kennedy Supports Civil Rights
Freedom Summer and Voting Rights
From Civil Rights to Black Power
Federal Efforts toward Social Reform, 1964–1968
The Great Society
The Warren Court
The Vietnam War, 1961–1969
Kennedy’s Intervention in South Vietnam
Johnson Escalates the War in Vietnam
Challenges to the Liberal Establishment
The New Left
The Counterculture
Liberation Movements
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Chicano and Native American Freedom Movements
Source 26.2 Chicano Student Movement of Aztlán, 1969
Source 26.3 The Alcatraz Proclamation, 1969
The Revival of Conservatism
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
Race and Class in Second Wave Feminism
Source 26.4 Anne Valk, Feminist Interactions, 2008
Source 26.5 Linda Gordon, Race, Class, and Feminism, 2014
Conclusion: Liberalism and Its Discontents
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 26
Freedom Summer
Source 26.6 Prospectus for Mississippi Freedom Summer, 1964
Source 26.7 Nancy Ellin, Letter Describing Freedom Summer,
1964
Source 26.8 White Southerners Respond to Freedom Summer,
1964
Source 26.9 Fannie Lou Hamer, Address to the Democratic
National Convention Credentials Committee, 1964
Source 26.10 Lyndon B. Johnson, Monitoring the MFDP
Challenge, 1964
27 The Swing toward Conservatism
1968–1980
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Allan Bakke and Louise Day Hicks
Nixon: War and Diplomacy, 1969–1974
The Election of 1968
The Failure of Vietnamization
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 27.1 Richard Nixon, Speech Accepting the
Republican Nomination for President, August 8, 1968
The Cold War Thaws
Crisis in the Middle East and at Home
Nixon and Politics
Pragmatic Conservatism
The Nixon Landslide and Watergate Scandal, 1972–1974
The Presidency of Jimmy Carter
Jimmy Carter and the Limits of Affluence
The Perils of Détente
Challenges in the Middle East
The Persistence of Liberalism in the 1970s
Popular Culture
Women’s Movement
Environmentalism
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
Women of Color and Feminism
Source 27.2 Workshop Resolutions, First National Chicana
Conference, 1971
Source 27.3 Combahee River Collective, A Black Feminist
Statement, 1977
Racial Struggles Continue
The New Right Rises
Tax Revolt
Neo Conservatism
Christian Conservatism
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Rise of the New Right
Source 27.4 Dan T. Carter, George Wallace, Race, and the
New Right, 1996
Source 27.5 Daniel K. Williams, The Christian Right, 2010
Conclusion: The Swing toward Conservatism
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 27
The New Right and Its Critics
Source 27.6 Proposition 13, California, 1978
Source 27.7 Phyllis Schlafly, “What’s Wrong with ‘Equal Rights’
for Women?” 1972
Source 27.8 Gloria Steinem, Testimony on the Equal Rights
Amendment, May 6, 1970
Source 27.9 Paul Weyrich, Building the Moral Majority, 1979
Source 27.10 A. Bartlett Giamatti, The Moral Majority Threatens
Freedom, 1981
28 The Triumph of Conservatism, the End of the Cold War,
and the Rise of the New World Order,
1980–1992
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
George Shultz and Barbara Deming
The Reagan Revolution
Reagan and Reaganomics
The Implementation of Social Conservatism
Reagan and the End of the Cold War, 1981–1988
“The Evil Empire”
Human Rights and the Fight against Communism
Fighting International Terrorism
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 28.1 Robert Ode, Iran Hostage Diary, 1979–1980
The Nuclear Freeze Movement
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The Nuclear Freeze Movement
Source 28.2 New Jersey Referendum on Nuclear Freeze,
1982
Source 28.3 United States Conference of Catholic Bishops,
Pastoral Letter on War and Peace, 1983
The Road to Nuclear De-escalation
The Presidency of George H. W. Bush, 1989–1993
“Kinder and Gentler” Conservatism
The Breakup of the Soviet Union
Globalization and the New World Order
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The End of the Cold War
Source 28.4 John Spanier, Gorbachev Needed to End the
Cold War, 1992
Source 28.5 Beth Fischer, Reagan Ends the Cold War, 1997
Managing Conflict after the Cold War
The 1992 Election
Conclusion: Conservative Ascendancy and the End of the
Cold War
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 28
The Iran-Contra Affair
Source 28.6 The Boland Amendments, 1982 and 1984
Source 28.7 CIA Freedom Fighter’s Manual, 1983
Source 28.8 Ronald Reagan, Speech on the Iran-Contra Affair,
1987
Source 28.9 Oliver North, Testimony to Congress, July 1987
Source 28.10 George Mitchell, Response to Oliver North, 1987
29 The Challenges of a Globalized World
1993 to the present
COMPARING AMERICAN HISTORIES
Bill Gates and Kristen Breitweiser
Transforming American Business and Society
The Computer Revolution
Business Consolidation
The Changing American Population
Political Divisions and Globalization in the Clinton Years
Domestic and Economic Policy during the Clinton
Administration
GUIDED ANALYSIS
Source 29.1 Bo Yee, The New American Sweatshop, 1994
Global Challenges
The Presidency of George W. Bush
Bush and Compassionate Conservatism
The Iraq War
COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS
The War in Iraq
Source 29.2 George W. Bush, Declaration of Victory in Iraq,
May 1, 2003
Source 29.3 Farnaz Fassihi, Report from Baghdad, 2004
Bush’s Second Term
The Challenges Faced by President Barack Obama
The Great Recession
Obama and Domestic Politics
Obama and the World
SECONDARY SOURCE ANALYSIS
The Election of Barack Obama
Source 29.4 Frederick C. Harris, Decline of Black Politics,
2012
Source 29.5 Randall Kennedy, The Importance of
Symbolism, 2011
The Presidency of Donald Trump
The 2016 Election
The Trump Presidency
Women Reshape the Political Culture
Conclusion: Technology and Terror in a Global Society
Chapter Review
PRIMARY SOURCE PROJECT 29
The Uses of September 11
Source 29.6 Diana Hoffman, “The Power of Freedom,” 2002
Source 29.7 Khaled Abou El Fadl, Response to September 11,
2001
Source 29.8 Anti-Muslim Discrimination, 2011
Source 29.9 Edward Snowden, Interview, 2014
Source 29.10 Alice M. Greenwald, Message from the Director of
the 9/11 Memorial Museum
Appendix
The Declaration of Independence
The Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union
The Constitution of the United States
Admission of the States to the Union
Presidents of the United States
Glossary of Key Terms
Credits
Index

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