Major problems in American history : documents and essays

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Major problems in American history : documents and essays

edited by Elizabeth Cobbs Hoffman, Jon Gjerde

(Major problems in American history series)

Houghton Mifflin, c2007

2nd ed

  • v. 1 To 1877 : pbk
  • v. 2 Since 1865 : pbk

Available at  / 10 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references

"Cengage Learning is proud to announce the acquisition of Houghton Mifflin College Division, which will be integrated into the Academic & Professional Group within Cengage Learning"--Home page of Cengage Learning

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

v. 1 To 1877 : pbk ISBN 9780618678327

Description

Designed to encourage critical thinking about history, the Major Problems in American History series introduces students to both primary sources and analytical essays on important topics in U.S. history. This collection serves as the primary anthology for the introductory survey course, covering the subject's entire chronological span. Comprehensive topical coverage includes politics, economics, labor, gender, culture, and social trends. The Second Edition features integrated coverage of women in Volume I, as well as a streamlined chronology in Volume II. Key pedagogical elements of the Major Problems format have been retained: 14 to 15 chapters per volume, chapter introductions, headnotes, and suggested readings.

Table of Contents

1. Conquest and Colliding Empires DOCUMENTS 1. The Iroquois Describe the Beginning of the World, n.d. 2. Christopher Columbus Recounts His First Encounters with Native People, 1493 3. Fray Bernardino de Sahagun Relates an Aztec Chronicler's Account of the Spanish Conquest of the Aztecs, 1519 4. Father Bartolome de Las Casas Disparages the Treatment of the Indians, 1542 5. Reverend John Heckewelder Records a Native Oral Tradition of the First Arrival of Europeans on Manhattan Island (1610), Printed in 1818 6. Father Paul Le Jeune Reports on His Encounters with the Indians, 1634 7. William Wood Describes Indian Responses to the English, 1634 ESSAYS James H. Merrell, The Indians' New World Neal Salisbury, The Indians' Old World 2. The Southern Colonies in British America DOCUMENTS 1. Edward Waterhouse, a British Official, Recounts an Indian Attack on Early Virginia Settlement, 1622 2. Indentured Servant Richard Frethorne Laments His Condition in Virginia, 1623 3. George Alsop, a Resident of Maryland, Argues That Servants Profit from Life in the Colonies, 1666 4. Nathaniel Bacon, Leader of a Rebellion, Recounts the Misdeeds of the Virginia Governor, 1676 5. Virginia's Statutes Illustrate the Declining Status of African American Slaves, 1660-1705 6. Southern Planter William Byrd Describes His Views Toward Learning and His Slaves, 1709-1710 7. African Olaudah Equiano Recounts the Horrors of Enslavement, 1757 8. Anglican Minister Charles Woodmason Complains About Life in the Carolina Backcountry, 1768 ESSAYS Kathleen M. Brown, The Anxious World of the Slaveowning Patriarch Philip D. Morgan, The Effects of Paternalism Among Whites and Blacks 3. Colonial New England and the Middle Colonies in British America DOCUMENTS 1. Puritan Leader John Winthrop Provides a Model of Christian Charity, 1630 2. William Bradford, Governor of Plymouth Colony, Mourns a Wickedness That Breaks Forth, 1642 3. Mary Rowlandson, A New England Woman, Recounts Her Experience of Captivity and Escape from the Wampanoag during King Philip's War, 1675 4. Proprietor William Penn Promotes His Colony, 1681 5. Massachusetts Officials Describe the Outbreak of Witchcraft in Salem, 1692 6. Reverend Jonathan Edwards Pictures Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God, 1741 7. A Young Benjamin Franklin Celebrates a Life of Thrift and Industry, 1733, 1750 8. Dr. Alexander Hamilton Depicts the Material Acquisitions of Northern Colonists, 1744 9. Gottlieb Mittelberger, a German Immigrant, Portrays the Difficulties of Immigration, 1750 ESSAYS James A. Henretta, The Northern Colonies as a Family-Centered Society T. H. Breen, The Northern Colonies as an Empire of Goods 4. The American Revolution DOCUMENTS 1. The Stamp Act Congress Condemns the Stamp Act, 1765 2. Virginian Patrick Henry Warns the British to Maintain American Liberties, 1775 3. Pamphleteer Thomas Paine Advocates the "Common Sense" of Independence, 1776 4. Abigail Adams, Wife of John Adams, Asks Her Husband to "Remember the Ladies," 1776 5. Mohawk Leader Joseph Brant Commits the Loyalty of His People to Britain, 1776 6. The Declaration of Independence States American Grievances Against British "Tyranny," 1776 7. African Americans Petition for Freedom, 1777 8. General Washington Argues for Greater Military Funding by Portraying the Plight of Soldiers at Valley Forge, 1778 9. Loyalists Plead Their Cause to the King, 1782 ESSAYS Gordon S. Wood, Radical Possibilities of the American Revolution Woody Holton, The Revolution as an Economic Response to American Uncertainties 5. The Making of the Constitution DOCUMENTS 1. The Articles of Confederation Stress the Rights of States, 1781 2. Cato, an African American, Pleads for the Abolition of Slavery in Pennsylvania, 1781 3. Frenchman Hector St. John Crevecoeur Compares the Freedom in the North with Slavery in the South, 1782 4. Slaveholders in Virginia Argue Against the Abolition of Slavery, 1784-1785 5. Thomas Jefferson Proposes the Protection of Religious Freedom in Virginia, 1786 6. Generals William Shepard and Benjamin Lincoln Regret the Disorder That Characterized Shays's Rebellion, 1787 7. The Federalist Papers Illustrate the Advantages of Ratification of the Constitution, 1787 8. Patrick Henry Condemns the Centralization of Government If the Constitution Is Ratified, 1788 9. George Washington Promises Freedom of Religion for Jewish People, 1790 ESSAYS Alfred F. Young, The Pressure of the People on the Framers of the Constitution Jack N. Rakove, The Hope of the Framers to Recruit Citizens to Enter Public Life 6. Competing Visions of National Development in the Early National Period DOCUMENTS 1. Republican Thomas Jefferson Celebrates the Virtue of the Yeoman Farmer, 1785 2. Federalist Alexander Hamilton Envisions a Developed American Economy, 1791 3. Thomas Jefferson Berates the Federalists, 1796 4. C. William Manning, a Republican, Fears for the Future of the Nation, 1798 5. Thomas Jefferson Advances the Power of the States, 1798 6. Competing Illustrated Viewpoints on the Role of Women in the Early National Period 7. Chief Justice John Marshall Argues for the Primacy of the Federal Government, 1803 8. Author Parson Weems Romanticizes the Life of George Washington, 1808 ESSAYS Linda K. Kerber, The Fears of the Federalists Drew R. McCoy, The Fears of the Jeffersonian Republicans 7. Foreign Policy, Westward Movement, and Indian Removal in the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries DOCUMENTS 1. Federalist Alexander Hamilton Cautions Against Aiding the Republic of France, 1794 2. President George Washington Warns Against "Entangling Alliances," 1796 3. William Clark of the Lewis and Clark Expedition Enters into Diplomacy with Native People, 1806 4. Iroquois Chief Red Jacket Decries the Day When Whites Arrived, 1805 5. Shawnee Chief Tecumseh Recounts the Misdeeds of Whites and Calls for Indian Unity, 1810 6. Tenskwatawa (The Prophet) Relates His Journey to the World Above, 1810 7. Secretary of State John Quincy Adams Advises Against the Search for "Monsters to Destroy," 1821 8. President James Monroe Declares That European Powers May Not Interfere in the Americas, 1823 9. The Cherokee Nation Pleads to Remain "on the Land of Our Fathers," 1830 ESSAYS Gregory Dowd Evans, Indians Utilizing a Strategy of Armed Resistance Theda Perdue, Indians Utilizing a Strategy of Accommodation 8. The Transportation Revolution and the Market Revolution in the Early Nineteenth Century DOCUMENTS 1. Slave Charles Ball Mourns the Growth of Cotton Culture and "Sale Down the River" ca. 1800 2. Chief Justice John Marshall Advances a Broad Construction of the Constitution, 1819, 1824 3. President John Quincy Adams Urges Internal Improvements, 1825 4. A Family in Illinois Struggles with Marketing Their Crops, 1831 5. Harriet Hanson Robinson, a "Lowell Girl" Describes Her Labor in a Textile Mill, 1831 6. European Visitor Alexis de Tocqueville Considers the Influence of Democracy on the Family, 1831 7. Author Charles Dickens Describes Travel on an Early Railroad Train, 1842 8. A Guidebook Instructs Women on the Role of Mother, 1845 ESSAYS Nancy F. Cott, The Market Revolution and Changes in Women's Work Charles Sellers, The Market Revolution and the Growth in Economic Inequality 9. Nationalism, Sectionalism, and Expansionism in the Age of Jackson DOCUMENTS 1. Vice President John C. Calhoun Argues That Tariffs Disadvantage the South, 1828 2. Senator Daniel Webster Lays Out His Nationalist Vision, 1830 3. President Andrew Jackson Condemns the Rights of "Nullification" and Secession, 1832 4. President Andrew Jackson Vetoes the Bank Bill, 1832 5. Historian George Bancroft Asserts His Faith in the Wisdom of the People, 1835 6. Lieutenant-Colonel Jose Enrique de la Pena Defends Mexico's Actions Against the Texans, 1836 7. Michel Chevelier, a French Visitor, Marvels at the Pageantry of Politics, 1839 8. John L. O'Sullivan, a Democratic Newspaperman, Defines "Manifest Destiny," 1845 9. Walter Colton, a Californian, Describes the Excitement of the Gold Rush, 1848 ESSAYS Mary P. Ryan, Antebellum Politics as Raucous Democracy Glenn C. Altschuler and Stuart M. Blumin, Antebellum Politics as Political Manipulation 10. Reform and the Great Awakening in the Early Nineteenth Century DOCUMENTS 1. Peter Cartwright, a Methodist Itinerant Preacher, Marvels at the Power of Religious Revivals, 1801 2. Frances Trollope, an Englishwoman, Views a Religious Meeting in Indiana, 1829 3. African American Abolitionist David Walker Castigates the United States for Its Slave System, 1829 4. White Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison Calls for Immediate Abolition, 1831 5. New England Intellectual Ralph Waldo Emerson Considers the United States as a Center for Reform, 1841 6. Reformer Dorothea Dix Depicts the Horrible Conditions Endured by the Mentally Ill, 1843 7. The Seneca Falls Convention Declares Women's Rights, 1848 8. Former Slave Sojourner Truth Links Women's Rights to Antislavery, 1851 ESSAYS Paul E. Johnson, Religious Reform as a Form of Social Control Nathan O. Hatch, Religious Revivalism as a Form of Democratization 11. Commercial Development and Immigration in the North at Midcentury DOCUMENTS 1. Alexis de Tocqueville Marvels at the Mobile Northern Society, 1831 2. Inventor Samuel F. B. Morse Fears That Immigrants Will Ruin American Inequality, 1835 3. Essayist Orestes Brownson Condemns the Plight of "Wage Slaves," 1840 4. The United States Democratic Review Argues That "White Slavery" Threatens the Urban North, 1842 5. Gustof Unonius, a Swedish Immigrant, Reflects on Life in the United States, 1841-1842 6. Ex-Slave Frederick Douglass Encounters Racist Animosity in a Northern City, 1845 7. New Yorker George Templeton Strong Berates the Immigrants in His Midst, 1838-1857 8. James Bowlin, a Congressman, Marvels at the Possibilities of Western Lands, 1846 ESSAYS David R. Roediger, White Slaves, Wage Slaves, and Free White Labor in the North John Ashworth, Free Labor and Wage Labor in the North 12. Agricultural Development and Slavery in the South at Midcentury DOCUMENTS 1. A North Carolina Law Prohibits Teaching Slaves to Read or Write, 1831 2. Samuel Cartwright, A Southern Doctor, Theorizes About the Peculiar Diseases of Slaves, 1851 3. Virginian George Fitzhugh Argues That Slavery Is a Positive Good That Improves Society, 1854 4. African American Josiah Henson Portrays the Violence and Fears in Slave Life, 1858 5. Former Slaves Recall Their Lives in Slavery, 1850s 6. Southern Author Daniel Hundley Robinson Depicts the Yeoman White Farmer, 1860 7. Harriet Jacobs Deplores Her Risks in Being a Female Slave, 1861 8. Southerner Mary Chestnut Describes Her Hatred of Slavery from a White Woman's View, 1861 9. Northerner Frederick Law Olmsted Depicts the Economic Costs of Slavery, 1861 ESSAYS Walter Johnson, Slaves and the "Commerce" of the Slave Trade James Oakes, Slaveholders and Liberal "Rights" 13. Careening Toward Civil War DOCUMENTS 1. Senator John C. Calhoun Proposes Ways to Preserve the Union, 1850 2. Frederick Douglass Asks How a Slave Can Celebrate the Fourth of July, 1852 3. Reviewers Offer Differing Opinions about Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852 4. Axalla John Hoole, a Southerner, Depicts "Bleeding Kansas," 1856 5. Senator Charles Sumner Addresses the "Crime Against Kansas," 1856 6. Chief Justice Roger Taney Determines the Legal Status of Slaves, 1857 7. Senate Candidates Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas Debate Their Positions on Slavery, 1858 8. Republican William Seward Warns of an Irrepressible Conflict, 1858 9. Abolitionist John Brown Makes His Last Statement to the Court Before Execution, 1859 10. The Charleston Mercury Argues That Slavery Must Be Protected, 1860 ESSAYS David M. Potter, The Sectional Divisions That Led to Civil War Michael F. Holt, The Political Divisions That Contributed to Civil War 14. The Civil War DOCUMENTS 1. Senator Robert Toombs Compares Secession with the American Revolution, 1860 2. Frederick Douglass Calls for the Abolition of Slavery, 1862 3. Debow's Review, a Southern Journal, Condemns the Government and Army of the Union, 1862 4. James Henry Gooding, an African American Soldier, Pleads for Equal Treatment, 1863 5. Tally Simpson, a Confederate Soldier, Recounts the Battle of Gettysburg, 1863 6. Mary A. Livermore, a Northern Woman, Recalls Her Role in the Sanitary Commission, 1863 7. Abraham Lincoln Speaks About the Meaning of the War, 1863, 1865 8. Congressman Clement Vallandigham Denounces the Union War Effort, 1863 9. Sidney Andrews, a Northern Journalist, Reports on the Devastation of South Carolina, 1866 ESSAYS James M. McPherson, The Role of Abraham Lincoln in the Abolition of Slavery Ira Berlin et al., The Role of African Americans in the Abolition of Slavery 15. Reconstruction, 1865-1877 DOCUMENTS 1. African Americans Talk About Their Personal Experiences of Newfound Freedom, c. 1865 2. Louisiana Black Codes Reinstate Provisions of the Slave Era, 1865 3. President Andrew Johnson Denounces Changes in His Program of Reconstruction, 1867 4. Congressman Thaddeus Stevens Demands a Radical Reconstruction, 1867 5. Representative Benjamin Butler Argues That President Andrew Johnson Be Impeached, 1868 6. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Questions Abolitionist Support for Female Enfranchisement, 1868 7. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments Grant Citizenship and Due Process of Law to African Americans and Suffrage to African American Men, 1868, 1870 8. Elias Hill, an African American Man, Recounts a Nighttime Visit from the Ku Klux Klan, 1871 9. Confederate General Jubal Early Memorializes the "Lost Cause," 1894 ESSAYS Steven Hahn, Continuing the War: White and Black Violence During Reconstruction David W. Blight, Ending the War: The Push for National Reconciliation
Volume

v. 2 Since 1865 : pbk ISBN 9780618678334

Description

Designed to encourage critical thinking about history, the Major Problems in American History series introduces students to both primary sources and analytical essays on important topics in U.S. history. This collection serves as the primary anthology for the introductory survey course, covering the subject's entire chronological span. Comprehensive topical coverage includes politics, economics, labor, gender, culture, and social trends. The Second Edition features integrated coverage of women in Volume I, as well as a streamlined chronology in Volume II. Key pedagogical elements of the Major Problems format have been retained: 14 to 15 chapters per volume, chapter introductions, headnotes, and suggested readings.

Table of Contents

1. Reconstruction, 1865-1877 DOCUMENTS 1. African Americans Recall Personal Experiences of Newfound Freedom, c. 1865 2. Louisiana Black Codes Reinstate Provisions of the Slave Era, 1865 3. President Andrew Johnson Denounces Changes in His Program of Reconstruction, 1867 4. Congressman Thaddeus Stevens Demands a Radical Reconstruction, 1867 5. Representative Benjamin Butler Argues That President Andrew Johnson Be Impeached, 1868 6. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Questions Abolitionist Support for Female Enfranchisement, 1868 7. The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments Grant Citizenship and Due Process of Law to African Americans and Suffrage to African American Men, 1868, 1870 8. Elias Hill, an African American Man, Recounts a Nighttime Visit from the Ku Klux Klan, 1871 9. Confederate General Jubal Early Memorializes the Lost Cause," 1894 ESSAYS Steven Hahn, Continuing the War: White and Black Violence During Reconstruction David W. Blight, Ending the War: The Push for National Reconciliation 2. Western Settlement and the Frontier DOCUMENTS 1. The Governor of Missouri Orders the Militia to Exterminate Mormons, 1838 2. The Homestead Act Provides Free Land to Settlers, 1862 3. Pioneer Mary Barnard Aguirre Marries into the Spanish West, 1863 4. The Federal Government Punishes Confederate Indians, 1865 5. Katie Bighead (Cheyenne) Remembers Custer and the Battle of Little Big Horn, 1876 6. Chief Joseph (Nez Perc ) Surrenders, 1877 7. Southern Freedmen Resolve to Move West, 1879 8. Wyoming Gunfight: An Attack on Chinatown, 1885 9. Historian Frederick Jackson Turner Articulates the "Frontier Thesis," 1893 ESSAYS Ray Allen Billington, The Frontier as a Cradle of Liberty Patricia Nelson Limerick, The Frontier as a Place of Conquest and Conflict 3. Industrialization, Workers, and the New Immigration DOCUMENTS 1. Chinese Immigrant Lee Chew Denounces Prejudice in America, 1882 2. Poet Emma Lazurus Praises The New Colossus, 1883 3. Immigrant Thomas O'Donnell Describes the Worker's Plight, 1883 4. Steel Magnate Andrew Carnegie Preaches a Gospel of Wealth, 1889 5. Unionist Samuel Gompers Asks "What Does the Working Man Want?" 1890 6. Jurgis Rudkus Discovers Drink in The Jungle, 1905 7. A Slovenian Boy Recounts Tales of the Golden Country, 1909 8. Engineer Frederick Winslow Taylor Manufactures the Ideal Worker, 1910 ESSAYS Oscar Handlin, Uprooted and Trapped: The One-Way Route to Modernity Mark Wyman, Coming and Going: Round Trip to America 4. Imperialism and World Power DOCUMENTS 1. President William McKinley Asks for War to Liberate Cuba, 1898 2. Governor Theodore Roosevelt Praises the Manly Virtues of Imperialism, 1899 3. Filipino Leader Emilio Aguinaldo Rallies His People to Arms, 1899 4. The American Anti-Imperialist League Denounces U.S. Policy, 1899 5. Mark Twain Satirizes "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," 1900 6. A Soldier Criticizes American Racism in the Philippines, 1902 7. The Roosevelt Corollary Makes the U.S. the Police of Latin America, 1904 8. President Woodrow Wilson Disavows Territorial Conquest, 1913 ESSAYS Gail Bederman, Gendering Imperialism: Theodore Roosevelt's Quest for Manhood and Empire Anders Stephanson, Global Competition and Manifest Destiny on the Cusp of the Twentieth Century 5. The Progressive Movement DOCUMENTS 1. W.C.T.U. Blasts Drinking and Smoking, and Demands the Power to Protect, 1893 2. Philosopher John Dewey Advocates Democracy Through Education, 1899 3. NAACP Founder W.E.B. DuBois Denounces Compromise on Negro Education and Civil Rights, 1903 4. Journalist Lincoln Steffens Exposes the Shame of Corruption, 1904 5. Political Boss George Washington Plunkitt Defends "Honest" Graft, 1905 6. Social Worker Jane Addams Advocates Civic Housekeeping, 1906 7. President Theodore Roosevelt Preaches Conservation and Efficiency, 1908 8. Sociologist William Graham Sumner Denounces Reformers' Fanaticism, 1913 9. Rewriting the Constitution: Amendments on Income Tax, Election of Senators, Prohibition, and the Vote for Women, 1913-1920 ESSAYS Daniel T. Rodgers, American Progressivism in the Wider Atlantic World Eric Rauchway, A Distinctive American Progressivism: Women, Immigrants, and Education 6. America in World War I DOCUMENTS 1. President Woodrow Wilson Asks Congress to Declare War, 1917 2. Senator Robert M. LaFollette Passionately Dissents, 1917 3. A Union Organizer Testifies to Vigilante Attack, 1917 4. The U.S. Government Punishes War Protestors: The Espionage Act, 1918 5. Wilson Proposes a New World Order in the "Fourteen Points," 1918 6. Broadway Showman George M. Cohan Sings About Patriotism, 1918 7. An Ambulance Surgeon Describes What It Was Like "Over There," 1918 8. Publicist George Creel Recalls Selling the War, 1920 9. Cartoons for and Against the League of Nations, 1920 ESSAYS Walter McDougall, Woodrow Wilson: Egocentric Crusader Robert A. Pastor, Woodrow Wilson: Father of the Future 7. Crossing a Cultural Divide: The Twenties DOCUMENTS 1. The Governor of California Tells of the Japanese "Problem, "1920 2. Reverend Amzi Clarence Dixon Preaches on the Evils of Darwinism and Evolution, 1922 3. A Survey of the Morals of High School Students, 1924 4. Defense Attorney Clarence Darrow Interrogates Prosecutor William Jennings Bryan in the Monkey Trial, 1925 5. Novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald Reveals Attitudes About Gender and Race in The Great Gatsby, 1925 6. The Ku Klux Klan Defines Americanism, 1926 7. The Automobile Comes to Middletown, U.S.A., 1929 8. Langston Hughes: Poet of the 1920s Harlem Renaissance ESSAYS Paula S. Fass, Sex and Youth in the Jazz Age Edward J. Larson, Religious Traditionalists Battle Modernism (and Evolution) in the Roaring Twenties 8. The Depression, the New Deal, and Franklin D. Roosevelt DOCUMENTS 1. President Herbert Hoover Applauds Limited Government, 1931 2. The Nation Asks "Is It to Be Murder, Mr. Hoover?" 1932 3. Business Leader Henry Ford Advocates Self-Help, 1932 4. President Franklin Roosevelt Seeks Justice for "One-Third of a Nation," "1937 5. Nelson Rockefeller Lectures Standard Oil on Social Responsibility, 1937 6. Social Security Advisers Consider Male and Female Pensioners, 1938 7. A Union Man Gets His Job Back Under the New Labor Law, 1938 8. John Steinbeck Portrays the Outcast Poor in The Grapes of Wrath, 1939 9. Woody Guthrie Sings "This Land Is Your Land," 1940 ESSAYS David M. Kennedy, FDR: Advocate for the American People Robert Higgs, FDR: Opportunistic Architect of Big Government 9. The Ordeal of World War II DOCUMENTS 1. Nazi Leader Adolf Hitler Links Race and Nationality, 1927 2. President Franklin D. Roosevelt Asks Congress to Declare War, 1941 3. British Prime Minister Winston Churchill Reacts to Pearl Harbor, 1941 4. Roosevelt Identifies the "Four Freedoms" at Stake in the War, 1941 5. A Japanese American Recalls the Effect of Internment on Family Unity, 1942 6. Roosevelt and Soviet Premier Josef Stalin Plan the United Nations, 1943 7. An African American Soldier Notes the "Strange Paradox" of the War, 1944 8. An American Officer Worries About His Wife's Loyalty, 1944 9. Dwight Eisenhower Reports to General George Marshall on the German Concentration Camps, 1945 ESSAYS John Morton Blum, G.I. Joe: Fighting for Home Alan Brinkley, American Liberals: Fighting for a Better World 10. The Cold War and the Nuclear Age DOCUMENTS 1. Diplomat George Kennan Advocates Containment, 1946 2. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace Questions the "Get Tough" Policy, 1946 3. Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Novikov Sees a U.S. Bid for World Supremacy, 1946 4. The Truman Doctrine Calls for the United States to Become World's Police, 1947 5. The Marshall Plan Seeks to Rebuild Europe, 1948 6. Senator Joseph McCarthy Describes the Internal Communist Menace, 1950 7. The Federal Loyalty-Security Program Expels a Postal Clerk, 1954 8. Life Magazine Reassures Americans "We Won't All Be Dead" After Nuclear War, 1959 ESSAYS Walter LaFeber, Truman's Hard Line Prompted the Cold War John Lewis Gaddis, Stalin's Hard Line Prompted a Defensive Response in the United States and Europe 11. The 1950s "Boom": Affluence and Anxiety DOCUMENTS 1. Congress Passes the G.I. Bill of Rights, 1944 2. A Young American Is "Born on the Fourth of July," 1946 3. Science News Letter Reports a Baby Boom, 1954 4. Parental Indulgence Is Criticized in Rebel Without a Cause, 1955 5. Governor Adlai Stevenson Tells College Women About Their Place in Life, 1955 6. Author Paul Goodman Describes Growing Up Absurd, 1956 7. Life Magazine Identifies the New Teen-age Market, 1959 8. Feminist Betty Friedan Describes the Problem That Has No Name, 1959 9. New Yorker Cartoon, 1963 ESSAYS John Patrick Diggins, A Decade to Make One Proud Stephanie Coontz, Families in the Fifties: The Way We Never Were 12. Making the Great Society: Civil Rights DOCUMENTS 1. The United Nations Approves a Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948 2. The Supreme Court Rules on Brown v. Board of Education, 1954 3. Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr., Defends Seamstress Rosa Parks, 1955 4. Author Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Remembers Civil Rights on TV, 1957 5. Congress Outlaws Segregation with the Civil Rights Act of 1964 6. Black Muslim Malcolm X Warns: The Ballot or the Bullet, 1964 7. The National Organization for Women Calls for Equality, 1966 8. Mexican Americans Form La Raza Unida, 1968 9. A Proclamation from the Indians of All Tribes, Alcatraz Island, 1969 10. Congress Guarantees Rights of Americans with Disabilities, 1990 ESSAYS David J. Garrow, Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Emergence of a Grassroots Leader John D. Skrentny, The Minority Rights Revolution: Top Down and Bottom Up 13. The Sixties: Left, Right, and the Culture Wars DOCUMENTS 1. Young Americans for Freedom Draft a Conservative Manifesto, 1960 2. President John Kennedy Tells Americans to Ask "What You Can Do," 1961 3. Bill Moyers Remembers Kennedy's Effect on His Generation (1961), 1988 4. Students for a Democratic Society Advance a Reform Agenda, 1962 5. Folk Singer Malvina Reynolds Sees Young People in "Little Boxes," 1963 6. Alabama Governor George Wallace Denounces Top-Down Reform and Pledges "Segregation Forever," 1963 7. President Lyndon B. Johnson Declares a Federal War on Poverty, 1964 8. A Protestor at Columbia University Defends Long Hair and Revolution, 1969 9. Vice President Spiro Agnew Warns of the Threat to America, 1969 10. Psychologist Carl Rogers Emphasizes Being "Real" in Encounter Groups, 1970 ESSAYS Kenneth Cmiel, Triumph of the Left: Sixties Revolution and the Revolution in Manners Dan T. Carter, Triumph of the Right: George Wallace, Richard Nixon, and the Critique of Federal Activism 14. Vietnam and the Downfall of Presidents DOCUMENTS 1. Independence Leader Ho Chi Minh Pleads with Harry Truman for Support, 1946 2. President Dwight Eisenhower Warns of Falling Dominoes, 1954 3. Defense Analyst John McNaughton Advises Robert McNamara on War Aims, 1965 4. Undersecretary of State George Ball Urges Withdrawal from Vietnam, 1965 5. A Marine Remembers His Idealism of 1965 (1977) 6. Students for a Democratic Society Oppose the War, 1965 7. White House Counsel John W. Dean III Presents the "Enemies List," 1971 8. Senator Sam J. Ervin on the Watergate Crimes, 1974 ESSAYS Robert McNamara, James Blight, and Robert Brigham, Cold War Mindsets and the "Mistake" of Vietnam Robert Buzzanco, Anti-Democratic "Containment," No Mistake 15. End of the Cold War and New International Challenges: Globalization and Terrorism DOCUMENTS 1. President Ronald Regan Sees a Revitalized America, 1985 2. A Unionist Blasts the Export of Jobs, 1987 3. President George H. W. Bush Declares the Cold War Over, 1990 4. Campaign Adviser Condoleezza Rice Cautions Against Humanitarian Interventions, 2000 5. Two Workers Flee the Inferno in the Twin Towers, 2001 6. A New York Immigrant Weeps as the Twin Towers Fall, 2001 7. Journalist David Brooks Sees Basic Unity Between "Red" and "Blue" Americans, 2001 8. Senator Robert Byrd Condemns Post-9/11 Foreign Policy, 2003 9. President George W. Bush Ranks Freedom Above Stability, 2005 ESSAYS Bernard Lewis, Clash of Civilizations Thomas Friedman, Clash of Economies"

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