America between the wars, 1919-1941 : a documentary reader

著者

    • Welky, David

書誌事項

America between the wars, 1919-1941 : a documentary reader

edited by David Welky

(Uncovering the past : documentary readers in American history / series editors, Steven Lawson and Nancy Hewitt)

Wiley-Blackwell, 2012

  • : hardback
  • : paperback

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注記

Bibliography: p. [247]-256

Includes index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: hardback ISBN 9781444338966

内容説明

This collection situates over seventy essential primary documents in their historical context to illustrate the American experience during the interwar era (1919-1941). * Introduces a broad range of cultural and historical topics, from race and the role of women to trends in literature and the Great Depression * Includes a range of photographs and illustrations * End-of-chapter questions encourage critical thinking and analysis, while a bibliography prepares students for further research

目次

List of Illustrations ix Series Editors' Preface x Source Acknowledgments xii Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Challenges to Postwar Readjustment 10 1 W. E. B. DuBois, "Returning Soldiers," 1919 10 2 Jack Gaveel, Workers Need to Radicalize, 1919 12 3 A. Mitchell Palmer on Communism in America, 1920 15 4 Warren Harding, Readjustment, 1920 18 5 Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Immigration Hurts America, 1923 20 Chapter 2 Social Battles of the 1920s 24 1 Grand Dragon Hiram Evans on the Klan and Americanism, 1926 24 2 "The Menace of Fundamentalism," 1925 30 3 Edwin E. Slosson, "The Futility of Anti-Prohibition," 1920 32 4 "Why Boston Wishes to Hang Sacco and Vanzetti," 1927 34 Chapter 3 The New Negro 38 1 Floyd J. Calvin, Criticizing Southern Lynching, 1923 38 2 Marcus Garvey Addresses UNIA Supporters in Philadelphia, 1919 41 3 Alain Locke, "Harlem," 1925 43 4 Pace Phonograph Corporation, Supporting Black Businesses, 1921 47 5 Zora Neale Hurston, "How It Feels to Be Colored Me," 1928 49 6 Aaron Douglas, Aspects of Negro Life, 1934 and Into Bondage, 1936 52 Chapter 4 New Trends in Literature 55 1 Edna St. Vincent Millay, "Spring," 1920 55 2 Sinclair Lewis, Main Street, 1920 56 3 Countee Cullen, "Heritage," 1925 61 4 Nella Larsen, Quicksand, 1928 65 Chapter 5 Women in the 1920s 70 1 Viola I. Paradise, Housekeeping and Childcare in Rural Montana, 1919 70 2 Letters from Mothers to the Children's Bureau, 1920 7 74 3 Crystal Eastman, Radical Feminism, 1920 76 4 Margaret Sanger Defends Birth Control, 1923 79 5 Advertisement for Lysol Disinfectant: Tradition Meets the New Woman, 1928 82 Chapter 6 Mass Culture 85 1 Bruce Bliven, Radio's Promise and Pitfalls, 1924 85 2 Cartoons Celebrating Charles Lindbergh's Transatlantic Flight, 1927 89 3 Motion Pictures in Middletown, 1929 91 4 John R. Tunis on College Football, 1928 94 5 Paul Gallico Discusses the Relevance of Babe Ruth, 1932 97 Chapter 7 The Onset of the Great Depression 102 1 Paul Abbot on the National Economy, 1929 102 2 New York Times, First Day of the Crash, 1929 107 3 Herbert Hoover Speaks to the Press about the Economy, 1929 110 4 Calvin Coolidge, A Bright Economic Future If We Stay the Course, 1932 111 Chapter 8 To Fear or Not to Fear 116 1 Walter Lippmann, Candidate Franklin Roosevelt, 1932 116 2 Herbert Hoover, The Proposed New Deal Will Ruin Us, 1932 119 3 Franklin Roosevelt's Fireside Chat on Banking, 1933 122 4 Cartoon Celebrating the National Recovery Administration, 1933 126 Chapter 9 Voices from the Great Depression 129 1 Clarence Lee, Riding the Rails during the Great Depression, 1999 129 2 Ann Marie Low, Farming in the Dust Bowl, 1930 2 132 3 John L. Spivak, Migrant Farm Workers, 1934 136 4 Howard Kester, The Southern Tenant Farmers Union's "Ceremony of the Land," 1937 141 Chapter 10 The New Deal: Critics and Limitations 146 1 James P. Cannon, In Support of Unionization, 1934 146 2 Huey Long, "Every Man a King," 1934 148 3 Raymond E. Click to Franklin Roosevelt, The New Deal Means Socialism, 1935 152 4 The Saturday Evening Post Attacks Intrusive Government, 1935 153 5 Cartoons Denouncing the Court-Packing Plan, 1937 155 Chapter 11 People of Color in the Age of Roosevelt 159 1 Herman J. D. Carter, An Injustice at Scottsboro, 1933 159 2 James R. Reid, Joe Louis: African American Hero, 1938 161 3 John Collier on A New Deal for Native Americans, 1938 163 4 Eva Lowe (Chen Junqi) Describes Chinese American Life during the Depression, 1982 166 5 Luisa Moreno, Latinos and American Identity, 1940 169 Chapter 12 Women in the New Deal Era 174 1 Babe Didrikson: Viking Girl, 1932 174 2 Meridel Le Sueur, "I Was Marching," 1934 178 3 Bruce Gould and Beatrice Blackmar Gould, A Modern Marriage, 1937 182 4 Eleanor Roosevelt, "My Day," 1937, 1939 183 5 Letters from African American Women to the Federal Government, 1935 41 187 6 Dorothea Lange, Photos of Women Surviving Hard Times, 1939 192 Chapter 13 Raising the Walls in Turbulent Times 197 1 Henry Cabot Lodge Denounces the Proposed League of Nations, 1919 197 2 Harry Elmer Barnes, World War I Was a Mistake, 1926 200 3 Calvin Coolidge, Address to Congress Regarding the Invasion of Nicaragua, 1927 204 4 The Sinking of the Panay, 1937 206 Chapter 14 The Great Debate: America Encounters World War II 211 1 Franklin Roosevelt's Neutrality Message, 1939 211 2 Charles Lindbergh, America is Drifting toward War, 1940 214 3 Franklin Roosevelt, Fireside Chat on "An Arsenal of Democracy," 1940 217 4 A. Philip Randolph Calls for a March on Washington, 1941 222 5 Franklin Roosevelt Declares an Unlimited National Emergency, 1941 225 Chapter 15 Popular Culture and the Great Debate 228 1 Will Hays, The Motion Picture in a Changing World, 1940 228 2 Henry R. Luce, America and the War, 1940 230 3 Edward R. Murrow, This is London, 1940 234 4 War and Consumerism: Advertisements from Time Magazine, 1941 238 5 Harry Warner's Testimony to a Senate Subcommittee on War Propaganda in Film, 1941 243 Bibliography 247 Index 257
巻冊次

: paperback ISBN 9781444338973

内容説明

This collection situates over seventy essential primary documents in their historical context to illustrate the American experience during the interwar era (1919-1941). Introduces a broad range of cultural and historical topics, from race and the role of women to trends in literature and the Great Depression Includes a range of photographs and illustrations End-of-chapter questions encourage critical thinking and analysis, while a bibliography prepares students for further research

目次

List of Illustrations ix Series Editors' Preface x Source Acknowledgments xii Introduction 1 Chapter 1 Challenges to Postwar Readjustment 10 1 W. E. B. DuBois, "Returning Soldiers," 1919 10 2 Jack Gaveel, Workers Need to Radicalize, 1919 12 3 A. Mitchell Palmer on Communism in America, 1920 15 4 Warren Harding, "Readjustment," 1920 18 5 Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Immigration Hurts America, 1923 20 Chapter 2 Social Battles of the 1920s 24 1 Grand Dragon Hiram Evans on the Klan and Americanism, 1926 24 2 "The Menace of Fundamentalism," 1925 30 3 Edwin E. Slosson, "The Futility of Anti-Prohibition," 1920 32 4 "Why Boston Wishes to Hang Sacco and Vanzetti," 1927 34 Chapter 3 The New Negro 38 1 Floyd J. Calvin, Criticizing Southern Lynching, 1923 38 2 Marcus Garvey Addresses UNIA Supporters in Philadelphia, 1919 41 3 Alain Locke, "Harlem," 1925 43 4 Pace Phonograph Corporation, Supporting Black Businesses, 1921 47 5 Zora Neale Hurston, "How It Feels to Be Colored Me," 1928 49 6 Aaron Douglas, Aspects of Negro Life, 1934 and Into Bondage, 1936 52 Chapter 4 New Trends in Literature 55 1 Edna St. Vincent Millay, "Spring," 1920 55 2 Sinclair Lewis, Main Street, 1920 56 3 Countee Cullen, "Heritage," 1925 61 4 Nella Larsen, Quicksand, 1928 65 Chapter 5 Women in the 1920s 70 1 Viola I. Paradise, Housekeeping and Childcare in Rural Montana, 1919 70 2 Letters from Mothers to the Children's Bureau, 1920-7 74 3 Crystal Eastman, Radical Feminism, 1920 76 4 Margaret Sanger Defends Birth Control, 1923 79 5 Advertisement for Lysol Disinfectant: Tradition Meets the New Woman, 1928 82 Chapter 6 Mass Culture 85 1 Bruce Bliven, Radio's Promise and Pitfalls, 1924 85 2 Cartoons Celebrating Charles Lindbergh's Transatlantic Flight, 1927 89 3 Motion Pictures in Middletown, 1929 91 4 John R. Tunis on College Football, 1928 94 5 Paul Gallico Discusses the Relevance of Babe Ruth, 1932 97 Chapter 7 The Onset of the Great Depression 102 1 Paul Abbot on the National Economy, 1929 102 2 New York Times, First Day of the Crash, 1929 107 3 Herbert Hoover Speaks to the Press about the Economy, 1929 110 4 Calvin Coolidge, A Bright Economic Future If We Stay the Course, 1932 111 Chapter 8 To Fear or Not to Fear 116 1 Walter Lippmann, Candidate Franklin Roosevelt, 1932 116 2 Herbert Hoover, The Proposed New Deal Will Ruin Us, 1932 119 3 Franklin Roosevelt's Fireside Chat on Banking, 1933 122 4 Cartoon Celebrating the National Recovery Administration, 1933 126 Chapter 9 Voices from the Great Depression 129 1 Clarence Lee, Riding the Rails during the Great Depression, 1999 129 2 Ann Marie Low, Farming in the Dust Bowl, 1930-2 132 3 John L. Spivak, Migrant Farm Workers, 1934 136 4 Howard Kester, The Southern Tenant Farmers Union's "Ceremony of the Land," 1937 141 Chapter 10 The New Deal: Critics and Limitations 146 1 James P. Cannon, In Support of Unionization, 1934 146 2 Huey Long, "Every Man a King," 1934 148 3 Raymond E. Click to Franklin Roosevelt, The New Deal Means Socialism, 1935 152 4 The Saturday Evening Post Attacks Intrusive Government, 1935 153 5 Cartoons Denouncing the Court-Packing Plan, 1937 155 Chapter 11 People of Color in the Age of Roosevelt 159 1 Herman J. D. Carter, An Injustice at Scottsboro, 1933 159 2 James R. Reid, Joe Louis: African American Hero, 1938 161 3 John Collier on A New Deal for Native Americans, 1938 163 4 Eva Lowe (Chen Junqi) Describes Chinese American Life during the Depression, 1982 166 5 Luisa Moreno, Latinos and American Identity, 1940 169 Chapter 12 Women in the New Deal Era 174 1 Babe Didrikson: Viking Girl, 1932 174 2 Meridel Le Sueur, "I Was Marching," 1934 178 3 Bruce Gould and Beatrice Blackmar Gould, A Modern Marriage, 1937 182 4 Eleanor Roosevelt, "My Day," 1937, 1939 183 5 Letters from African American Women to the Federal Government, 1935-41 187 6 Dorothea Lange, Photos of Women Surviving Hard Times, 1939 192 Chapter 13 Raising the Walls in Turbulent Times 197 1 Henry Cabot Lodge Denounces the Proposed League of Nations, 1919 197 2 Harry Elmer Barnes, World War I Was a Mistake, 1926 200 3 Calvin Coolidge, Address to Congress Regarding the Invasion of Nicaragua, 1927 204 4 The Sinking of the Panay, 1937 206 Chapter 14 The Great Debate: America Encounters World War II 211 1 Franklin Roosevelt's Neutrality Message, 1939 211 2 Charles Lindbergh, America is Drifting toward War, 1940 214 3 Franklin Roosevelt, Fireside Chat on "An Arsenal of Democracy," 1940 217 4 A. Philip Randolph Calls for a March on Washington, 1941 222 5 Franklin Roosevelt Declares an Unlimited National Emergency, 1941 225 Chapter 15 Popular Culture and the Great Debate 228 1 Will Hays, The Motion Picture in a Changing World, 1940 228 2 Henry R. Luce, America and the War, 1940 230 3 Edward R. Murrow, This is London, 1940 234 4 War and Consumerism: Advertisements from Time Magazine, 1941 238 5 Harry Warner's Testimony to a Senate Subcommittee on War Propaganda in Film, 1941 243 Bibliography 247 Index 257

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