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Product details:
- ISBN-10 : 039392033X
- ISBN-13 : 978-0393920338
- Author: Eric Foner
Clear, concise, integrated, and up-to-date, Give Me Liberty! is a proven success with teachers and students. Eric Foner pulls the pieces of the past together into a cohesive picture, using the theme of freedom throughout. The Brief Fourth Edition is streamlined and coherent, and features stronger coverage of American religion, a bright four-color design, and a reinforced pedagogical program aimed at fostering effective reading and study skills.
Table Of Contens:
Volume 1. To 1877 — Volume 2. From 1865
List of maps, tables, and figures — 15. “What is freedom?” : Reconstruction, 1865-1877 — The meaning of freedom — Voices of freedom : (from) Petition of Committee in Behalf of the Freedmen to Andrew Johnson (1865) and (from) a sharecropping contract (1866) — The making of radical reconstruction — Radical reconstruction in the South — The overthrow of reconstruction — 16. America’s Gilded Age, 1870-1890 — The second industrial revolution — The transformation of the West — Voices of freedom : (from “A Second declaration of Independence (1879) / Ira Steward, and (from) “Wealth” (1889) / Andrew Carnegie — Politics in a gilded age — Freedom in the Gilded Age — Labor and the Republic — 17. Freedom’s boundaries, at home and abroad, 1890-1900 — The Populist challenge — The segregated South — Redrawing the boundaries — Becoming a world power — Voices of freedom : (from) Our country (1885) / Josiah Strong, and (from) “Aguinaldo’s Case against the United States” (1899) — 18. The Progressive Era, 1900-1916 — An urban age and a consumer society — Varieties of Progressivism — Voices of freedom : (from) Women and Economics (1898) / Charlotte Perkins Gilman, and (from) “The workingman’s conception of industrial liberty” (1910) / John Mitchell — The politics of Progressivism — The Progressive Presidents — 19. Safe for democracy : The United States and World War I, 1916-1920 — An era of intervention — America and the great war — Who is an American? — Voices of freedom : (from) Speech to the jury before sentencing under the Espionage Act (1918) / Eugene V. Debs, and (from) “Returning soldiers”, The Crisis (1919) / W.E.B. Du Bois — 1919 — 20. From business culture to Great Depression : The Twenties, 1920-1932 — The business of America — Business and government — Voices of freedom : (from) “The gulf between,” Atlantic Monthly (March 1928) / André Siegfried, and (from) Majority opinion, in Meyer v. Nebraska (1923) / Justice James C. McReynolds — The birth of civil liberties — The culture wars — The Great Depression
21. The New Deal, 1932-1940 — The first New Deal — The Grassroots Revolt — The second New Deal — A reckoning with liberty — Voices of freedom : (from) “Fireside chat” (1934) / Franklin D. Roosevelt, and (from) The harvest gypsies : on the road to the Grapes of Wrath(1938) / John Steinbeck — The limits of change — A new conception in America — 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 — Voices of freedom : (from) The American century (1941) / Henry R. Luce, and (from) “The Negro has always wanted the four freedoms,” in What the Negro Wants (1944) / Charles H. Wesley — The end of the War — 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 — Voices of freedom : (from) Protestant, Catholic, Jew (1955) / Will Herberg, and (from) “Who is loyal to American? Harper’s (September 1947) / Henry Steele Commager — 24. An affluent society, 1953-1960 — The Golden Age — The Eisenhower Era — The Freedom Movement — Voices of freedom : (from) the southern Manifesto (1956), and (from) Speech at Montgomery, Alabama (December 5, 1955) / Martin Luther King, Jr. — The election of 1960 — 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 — Voices of freedom : (from) Young Americans for Freedom, The Sharon Statement (September 1960), and (from) The Port Huron Statement (June 1962) / Tom Hayden and others — The new movements and the rights revolution — 1968– 26. The triumph of Conservatism, 1969-1988 — President Nixon — Vietnam and Watergate — The end of the Golden Age — The rising tide of conservatism — The Reagan revolution — Voices of freedom : (from) Redstockings Manifesto (1969), and (from) Listen, America! (1980) / Jerry Falwell — 27. Globalization and its discontents, 1989-2000 — The post-cold war world — A new economy? — Voices of freedom : (from) Speech on signing of NAFTA (1993) / Bill Clinton, and (from) Global Exchange, Seattle, Declaration for Global Democracy (December 1999) — Culture wars — Impeachment and the election of 2000 — Freedom and the new century — 28. A new century a new crises — The War on Terrorism — An American empire? — Voices of freedom : (from) The National Security Strategy of the United States (September 2002), and (from) Speech on the Middle East / Barack Obama — The aftermath of September 11 at home — The winds of change — The rise of Obama — Obama’s first term — Learning from history — The Declaration of Independence (1776) — The Constitution of the United States (1787) — Glossary
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