Test Bank for The American Pageant 17th by Kennedy
Product details:
- ISBN-10 : 1337616222
- ISBN-13 : 978-1337616225
- Author: David M. Kennedy
You may not think that a history book could make you laugh, but THE AMERICAN PAGEANT just might. It’s known for being one of the most popular, effective and entertaining texts on American history. Colorful anecdotes, first-person quotations and the authors’ trademark wit bring history to life. Learning aids make the book as accessible as it is enjoyable: part openers and chapter-ending chronologies provide a context for the major periods in American history, while primary sources and introductions to key historical figures give you a front row seat to the nation’s past.
Table contents:
- Part 1: Peopling a Continent c. 33,000 b.c.e.-1700 c.e.
- Chapter 1: New World Beginnings 33,000 b.c.e.-1680 c.e
- 1-1 The Shaping of North America
- 1-2 Peopling the Americas
- 1-3 The Earliest Americans
- 1-4 Indirect Discoverers of the New World
- 1-5 Europeans Enter Africa
- 1-6 Columbus Comes upon a New World
- 1-7 When Worlds Collide
- 1-8 The Conquest of Mexico and Peru
- 1-9 Exploration and Imperial Rivalry
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 2: The Contest for North America 1500-1664
- 2-1 France Finds a Foothold in Canada
- 2-2 New France Fans Out
- 2-3 The Spanish in North America
- 2-4 England’s Imperial Stirrings
- 2-5 Elizabeth Energizes England
- 2-6 England on the Eve of Empire
- 2-7 England Plants the Jamestown Seedling
- 2-8 Cultural Clashes in the Chesapeake
- 2-9 Old Netherlanders at New Netherland
- 2-10 Friction with English and Swedish Neighbors
- 2-11 Dutch Residues in New York
- 2-12 The Indians’ New World
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 3: Settling the English Colonies 1619-1700
- 3-1 Virginia: Child of Tobacco
- 3-2 Maryland: Catholic Haven
- 3-3 The West Indies: Way Station to Mainland America
- 3-4 Colonizing the Carolinas
- 3-5 The Emergence of North Carolina
- 3-6 Late-Coming Georgia: The Buffer Colony
- 3-7 The Plantation Colonies
- 3-8 The Protestant Reformation Produces Puritanism
- 3-9 The Pilgrims End Their Pilgrimage at Plymouth
- 3-10 The Bay Colony Bible Commonwealth
- 3-11 Building the Bay Colony
- 3-12 Trouble in the Bible Commonwealth
- 3-13 The Rhode Island “Sewer”
- 3-14 New England Spreads Out
- 3-15 Puritans and Indians
- 3-16 English Interference and Neglect
- 3-17 Penn’s Holy Experiment in Pennsylvania
- 3-18 Quaker Pennsylvania and Its Neighbors
- 3-19 The Middle Way in the Middle Colonies
- Chapter Review
- Part 2: Building British North America 1607-1775
- Chapter 4: American Life in the Seventeenth Century 1607-1692
- 4-1 The Unhealthy Chesapeake
- 4-2 The Tobacco Economy
- 4-3 Frustrated Freemen and Bacon’s Rebellion
- 4-4 Colonial Slavery
- 4-5 Southern Society
- 4-6 The New England Family
- 4-7 Life in the New England Towns
- 4-8 The Half-Way Covenant and the Salem Witch Trials
- 4-9 The New England Way of Life
- 4-10 The Early Settlers’ Days and Ways
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 5: Colonial Society on the Eve of Revolution 1700-1775
- 5-1 A Continent in Flux
- 5-2 Conquest by the Cradle
- 5-3 A Mingling of Cultures
- 5-4 Africans in America
- 5-5 The Structure of Colonial Society
- 5-6 Workaday America
- 5-7 Clerics, Physicians, and Jurists
- 5-8 Horsepower and Sailpower
- 5-9 Dominant Denominations
- 5-10 The Great Awakening
- 5-11 Schools and Colleges
- 5-12 A Provincial Culture
- 5-13 Pioneer Presses
- 5-14 The Great Game of Politics
- 5-15 Colonial Folkways
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 6: The Road to Revolution 1754-1775
- 6-1 The Clash of Empires
- 6-2 George Washington Inaugurates War with France
- 6-3 Global War and Colonial Disunity
- 6-4 Braddock’s Blundering and Its Aftermath
- 6-5 Pitt’s Palms of Victory
- 6-6 Restless Colonists
- 6-7 War’s Fateful Aftermath
- 6-8 The Deep Roots of Revolution
- 6-9 Mercantilism and Colonial Grievances
- 6-10 The Merits and Menace of Mercantilism
- 6-11 The Stamp Tax Uproar
- 6-12 Forced Repeal of the Stamp Act
- 6-13 The Townshend Tea Tax and the Boston “Massacre”
- 6-14 The Seditious Committees of Correspondence
- 6-15 Tea Brewing in Boston
- 6-16 Parliament Passes the “Intolerable Acts”
- 6-17 Bloodshed
- 6-18 Imperial Strength and Weakness
- 6-19 American Pluses and Minuses
- 6-20 A Thin Line of Heroes
- Chapter Review
- Part 3: Founding a New Nation 1775-1800
- Chapter 7: America Secedes from the Empire 1775-1783
- 7-1 Congress Drafts George Washington
- 7-2 Bunker Hill and Hessian Hirelings
- 7-3 The Abortive Conquest of Canada
- 7-4 Thomas Paine Preaches Common Sense
- 7-5 Paine and the Idea of “Republicanism”
- 7-6 Jefferson’s “Explanation” of Independence
- 7-7 Patriots and Loyalists
- 7-8 The Loyalist Exodus
- 7-9 General Washington at Bay
- 7-10 Burgoyne’s Blundering Invasion
- 7-11 Revolution in Diplomacy?
- 7-12 The Colonial War Becomes a Wider War
- 7-13 Blow and Counterblow
- 7-14 The Land Frontier and the Sea Frontier
- 7-15 Yorktown and the Final Curtain
- 7-16 Peace at Paris
- 7-17 A New Nation Legitimized
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 8: The Confederation and the Constitution 1776-1790
- 8-1 A Shaky Start toward Union
- 8-2 Constitution Making in the States
- 8-3 Economic Crosscurrents
- 8-4 Creating a Confederation
- 8-5 The Articles of Confederation: America’s First Constitution
- 8-6 Landmarks in Land Laws
- 8-7 The World’s Ugly Duckling
- 8-8 The Horrid Specter of Anarchy
- 8-9 A Convention of “Demigods”
- 8-10 Patriots in Philadelphia
- 8-11 Hammering Out a Bundle of Compromises
- 8-12 Safeguards for Conservatism
- 8-13 The Clash of Federalists and Antifederalists
- 8-14 The Great Debate in the States
- 8-15 The Four Laggard States
- 8-16 A Conservative Triumph
- 8-17 The Pursuit of Equality
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 9: Launching the New Ship of State 1789-1800
- 9-1 Growing Pains
- 9-2 Washington for President
- 9-3 The Bill of Rights
- 9-4 Hamilton Revives the Corpse of Public Credit
- 9-5 Customs Duties and Excise Taxes
- 9-6 Hamilton Battles Jefferson for a Bank
- 9-7 The Edges of the Nation
- 9-8 Mutinous Moonshiners in Pennsylvania
- 9-9 The Emergence of Political Parties
- 9-10 The Impact of the French Revolution
- 9-11 Washington’s Neutrality Proclamation
- 9-12 Embroilments with Britain
- 9-13 Jay’s Treaty and Washington’s Farewell
- 9-14 John Adams Becomes President
- 9-15 Unofficial Fighting with France
- 9-16 Adams Puts Peace above Party
- 9-17 The Federalist Witch Hunt
- 9-18 The Virginia (Madison) and Kentucky (Jefferson) Resolutions
- 9-19 Federalists versus Democratic-Republicans
- Chapter Review
- Part 4: Building the New Nation 1800-1860
- Chapter 10: The Triumphs and Travails of the Jeffersonian Republic 1800-1812
- 10-1 Federalist and Republican Mudslingers
- 10-2 The Jeffersonian “Revolution of 1800”
- 10-3 Responsibility Breeds Moderation
- 10-4 Jeffersonian Restraint
- 10-5 The “Dead Clutch” of the Judiciary
- 10-6 Jefferson, a Reluctant Warrior
- 10-7 The Louisiana Godsend
- 10-8 Louisiana in the Long View
- 10-9 Changes in the West
- 10-10 A Precarious Neutrality
- 10-11 The Hated Embargo
- 10-12 Madison’s Gamble
- 10-13 Tecumseh and the Prophet
- 10-14 Mr. Madison’s War
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 11: The War of 1812 and the Upsurge of Nationalism 1812-1824
- 11-1 On to Canada over Land and Lakes
- 11-2 Washington Burned and New Orleans Defended
- 11-3 The Treaty of Ghent
- 11-4 Federalist Grievances and the Hartford Convention
- 11-5 The Aftermath of War
- 11-6 Nascent Nationalism
- 11-7 “The American System”
- 11-8 The So-Called Era of Good Feelings
- 11-9 The Panic of 1819 and the Curse of Hard Times
- 11-10 Growing Pains of the West
- 11-11 Slavery and the Sectional Balance
- 11-12 The Uneasy Missouri Compromise
- 11-13 John Marshall and Judicial Nationalism
- 11-14 Judicial Dikes against Democratic Excesses
- 11-15 Sharing Oregon and Acquiring Florida
- 11-16 The Menace of Monarchy in America
- 11-17 Monroe and His Doctrine
- 11-18 Monroe’s Doctrine Appraised
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 12: The Rise of a Mass Democracy 1824-1840
- 12-1 The “Corrupt Bargain” of 1824
- 12-2 A Yankee Misfit in the White House
- 12-3 Land and the “Five Civilized Tribes”
- 12-4 Going “Whole Hog” for Jackson in 1828
- 12-5 “Old Hickory” as President
- 12-6 The Spoils System
- 12-7 The Tricky “Tariff of Abominations”
- 12-9 Indian Removal
- 12-10 The Bank War
- 12-11 “Old Hickory” Wallops Clay in 1832
- 12-12 Burying Biddle’s Bank
- 12-13 The Birth of the Whigs
- 12-14 The Election of 1836
- 12-15 Big Woes for the “Little Magician”
- 12-16 Depression Doldrums and the Independent Treasury
- 12-17 Gone to Texas
- 12-18 The Lone Star Rebellion
- 12-19 Log Cabins and Hard Cider of 1840
- 12-20 Politics for the People
- 12-21 The Two-Party System
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 13: Forging the National Economy 1790-1860
- 13-1 The Westward Movement
- 13-2 Shaping the Western Landscape
- 13-3 The March of the Millions
- 13-4 The Emerald Isle Moves West
- 13-5 The German Forty-Eighters
- 13-6 Flare-ups of Antiforeignism
- 13-7 Creeping Mechanization
- 13-8 Whitney Ends the Fiber Famine
- 13-9 Marvels in Manufacturing
- 13-10 Workers and “Wage Slaves”
- 13-11 Women and the Economy
- 13-12 Western Farmers Reap a Revolution in the Fields
- 13-13 Highways and Steamboats
- 13-14 “Clinton’s Big Ditch” in New York
- 13-15 The Iron Horse
- 13-16 Cables, Clippers, and Pony Riders
- 13-17 The Transport Web Binds the Union
- 13-18 The Market Revolution
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 14: The Ferment of Reform and Culture 1790-1860
- 14-1 Reviving Religion
- 14-2 Denominational Diversity
- 14-3 A Desert Zion in Utah
- 14-4 Free Schools for a Free People
- 14-5 Higher Goals for Higher Learning
- 14-6 An Age of Reform
- 14-7 Demon Rum – The “Old Deluder”
- 14-8 Women in Revolt
- 14-9 Wilderness Utopias
- 14-10 The Dawn of Scientific Achievement
- 14-11 Artistic Achievements
- 14-12 The Blossoming of a National Literature
- 14-13 Trumpeters of Transcendentalism
- 14-14 Glowing Literary Lights
- 14-15 Literary Individualists and Dissenters
- 14-16 Portrayers of the Past
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 15: The South and Slavery 1793-1860
- 15-1 “Cotton Is King!”
- 15-2 The Planter “Aristocracy”
- 15-3 Cotton Capitalism
- 15-4 The White Majority
- 15-5 Free Blacks: Slaves without Masters
- 15-6 Plantation Slavery
- 15-7 Life under the Lash
- 15-8 Resistance
- 15-9 Early Antislavery
- 15-10 Radical Abolitionism
- 15-11 The South Lashes Back
- 15-12 The Abolitionist Impact in the North
- Chapter Review
- Part 5: Testing the New Nation 1841-1877
- Chapter 16: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy 1841-1848
- 16-1 The Accession of “Tyler Too”
- 16-2 John Tyler: A President without a Party
- 16-3 A War of Words with Britain
- 16-4 Manipulating the Maine Maps
- 16-5 The Lone Star of Texas Shines Alone
- 16-6 The Annexation of Texas
- 16-7 Oregon Fever
- 16-8 A Mandate (?) for Manifest Destiny
- 16-9 Polk the Purposeful
- 16-10 Misunderstandings with Mexico
- 16-11 American Blood on American (?) Soil
- 16-12 The Invasion of Mexico
- 16-13 Fighting Mexico for Peace
- 16-14 Profit and Loss in Mexico
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 17: Renewing the Sectional Struggle 1848-1854
- 17-1 The Popular Sovereignty Panacea
- 17-2 Political Triumphs for General Taylor
- 17-3 “Californy Gold”
- 17-4 Sectional Balance and the Underground Railroad
- 17-5 Twilight of the Senatorial Giants
- 17-6 Deadlock and Danger on Capitol Hill
- 17-7 Breaking the Congressional Logjam
- 17-8 Balancing the Compromise Scales
- 17-9 Defeat and Doom for the Whigs
- 17-10 Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border
- 17-11 The Allure of Asia
- 17-12 Pacific Railroad Promoters and the Gadsden Purchase
- 17-13 Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Scheme
- 17-14 Congress Legislates a Civil War
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 18: Drifting toward Disunion 1854-1861
- 18-1 Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries
- 18-2 The North-South Contest for Kansas
- 18-3 Kansas in Convulsion
- 18-4 “Bully” Brooks and His Bludgeon
- 18-5 “Old Buck” versus “The Pathfinder”
- 18-6 The Electoral Fruits of 1856
- 18-7 The Dred Scott Bombshell
- 18-8 The Financial Crash of 1857
- 18-9 An Illinois Rail-Splitter Emerges
- 18-10 The Great Debate: Lincoln versus Douglas
- 18-11 John Brown: Murderer or Martyr?
- 18-12 The Disruption of the Democrats
- 18-13 A Rail-Splitter Splits the Union
- 18-14 The Electoral Upheaval of 1860
- 18-15 The Collapse of Compromise
- 18-16 The Secessionist Exodus
- 18-17 Farewell to Union
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 19: Girding for War: The North and the South 1861-1865
- 19-1 The Menace of Secession
- 19-2 South Carolina Assails Fort Sumter
- 19-3 Brothers’ Blood and Border Blood
- 19-4 The Balance of Forces
- 19-5 Dethroning King Cotton
- 19-6 The Decisiveness of Diplomacy
- 19-7 Foreign Flare-ups
- 19-8 President Davis versus President Lincoln
- 19-9 Limitations on Wartime Liberties
- 19-10 Volunteers and Draftees: North and South
- 19-11 The Economic Stresses of War
- 19-12 The North’s Economic Boom
- 19-13 A Crushed Cotton Kingdom
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 20: The Furnace of Civil War 1861-1865
- 20-1 Bull Run Ends the “Ninety-Day War”
- 20-2 “Tardy George” McClellan and the Peninsula Campaign
- 20-3 The Western Theater
- 20-4 The War at Sea
- 20-5 The Pivotal Point: Antietam
- 20-6 A Proclamation without Emancipation
- 20-7 Blacks Battle Bondage
- 20-8 Lee’s Last Lunge at Gettysburg
- 20-9 The Confederacy Divided
- 20-10 Sherman Scorches Georgia
- 20-11 The Politics of War
- 20-12 The Election of 1864
- 20-13 Grant Outlasts Lee
- 20-14 The Martyrdom of Lincoln
- 20-15 The Aftermath of the Nightmare
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 21: The Ordeal of Reconstruction 1865-1877
- 21-1 The Problems of Peace
- 21-2 Freedmen Define Freedom
- 21-3 The Freedmen’s Bureau
- 21-4 Johnson: The Tailor President
- 21-5 Presidential Reconstruction
- 21-6 The Baleful Black Codes
- 21-7 Congressional Reconstruction
- 21-8 Johnson Clashes with Congress
- 21-9 Swinging ‘Round the Circle with Johnson
- 21-10 Republican Principles and Programs
- 21-11 Reconstruction by the Sword
- 21-12 No Women Voters
- 21-13 The Realities of Radical Reconstruction in the South
- 21-14 The Ku Klux Klan
- 21-15 Johnson Walks the Impeachment Plank
- 21-16 A Not-Guilty Verdict for Johnson
- 21-17 The Purchase of Alaska
- 21-18 The Legacy of Reconstruction
- Chapter Review
- Part 6: Forging an Industrial Society 1865-1900
- Chapter 22: The Industrial Era Dawns 1865-1900
- 22-1 The Iron Colt Becomes an Iron Horse
- 22-2 Spanning the Continent with Rails
- 22-3 Binding the Country with Railroad Ties
- 22-4 Railroad Consolidation and Mechanization
- 22-5 Revolution by Railways
- 22-6 Wrongdoing in Railroading
- 22-7 Government Bridles the Iron Horse
- 22-8 Miracles of Mechanization
- 22-9 The Trust Titan Emerges
- 22-10 The Supremacy of Steel
- 22-11 Carnegie and Other Sultans of Steel
- 22-12 Rockefeller Grows an American Beauty Rose
- 22-13 The Gospel of Wealth
- 22-14 Government Tackles the Trust Evil
- 22-15 The South in the Age of Industry
- 22-16 The Impact of the New Industrial Revolution on America
- 22-17 In Unions There Is Strength
- 22-18 Labor Limps Along
- 22-19 Unhorsing the Knights of Labor
- 22-20 The AF of L to the Fore
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 23: Political Paralysis in the Gilded Age 1869-1896
- 23-1 The “Bloody Shirt” Elects Grant
- 23-2 The Era of Good Stealings
- 23-3 A Carnival of Corruption
- 23-4 The Liberal Republican Revolt of 1872
- 23-5 Depression, Deflation, and Inflation
- 23-6 Pallid Politics in the Gilded Age
- 23-7 The Hayes-Tilden Standoff, 1876
- 23-8 The Compromise of 1877 and the End of Reconstruction
- 23-9 The Birth of Jim Crow in the Post-Reconstruction South
- 23-10 Class Conflicts and Ethnic Clashes
- 23-11 Garfield and Arthur
- 23-12 The Blaine-Cleveland Mudslingers of 1884
- 23-13 “Old Grover” Takes Over
- 23-14 Cleveland Battles for a Lower Tariff
- 23-15 The Billion-Dollar Congress
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 24: America Moves to the City 1865-1900
- 24-1 The Urban Frontier
- 24-2 The New Immigration
- 24-3 Machines and Reformers Compete and Clash
- 24-4 Narrowing the Welcome Mat
- 24-5 Churches Confront the Urban Challenge
- 24-6 Darwin Disrupts the Churches
- 24-7 The Lust for Learning
- 24-8 Booker T. Washington and Education for Black People
- 24-9 The Hallowed Halls of Ivy
- 24-10 The Appeal of the Press
- 24-11 Apostles of Reform
- 24-12 The New Morality
- 24-13 Families and Women in the City
- 24-14 Prohibiting Alcohol and Promoting Reform
- 24-15 Postwar Fiction, Lowbrow and High
- 24-16 Artistic Triumphs
- 24-17 The Business of Amusement
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 25: The Conquest of the West 1865-1896
- 25-1 Indians and Whites on the Plains
- 25-2 The Indians Fight Back
- 25-3 Bellowing Herds of Bison
- 25-4 “Kill the Indian and Save the Man”
- 25-5 Mining: From Dishpan to Ore Breaker
- 25-6 Beef Bonanzas and the Long Drive
- 25-7 The Farmers’ Frontier
- 25-8 The Far West Comes of Age
- 25-9 The Fading Frontier
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 26: Rumbles of Discontent 1865-1900
- 26-1 The Farm Becomes a Factory
- 26-2 Deflation Dooms the Debtor
- 26-3 Unhappy Farmers
- 26-4 The Farmers Take Their Stand
- 26-5 Prelude to Populism
- 26-6 Cleveland and Depression
- 26-7 Cleveland Breeds a Backlash
- 26-8 Coxey’s Army and the Pullman Strike
- 26-9 Golden McKinley and Silver Bryan
- 26-10 Class Conflict: Plowholders versus Bondholders
- 26-11 Republican Stand-pattism Enthroned
- Chapter Review
- Part 7: Struggling for Justice at Home and Abroad 1890-1945
- Chapter 27: Empire and Expansion 1890-1909
- 27-1 America Turns Outward
- 27-2 Spurning the Hawaiian Pear
- 27-3 Cubans Rise in Revolt
- 27-4 Dewey’s May Day Victory at Manila
- 27-5 The Confused Invasion of Cuba
- 27-6 America’s Course (Curse?) of Empire
- 27-7 Perplexities in Puerto Rico and Cuba
- 27-8 New Horizons in Two Hemispheres
- 27-9 “Little Brown Brothers” in the Philippines
- 27-10 Hinging the Open Door in China
- 27-11 Imperialism or Bryanism in 1900?
- 27-12 TR: Brandisher of the Big Stick
- 27-13 Building the Panama Canal
- 27-14 TR’s Perversion of Monroe’s Doctrine
- 27-15 Roosevelt on the World Stage
- 27-16 Japanese Laborers in California
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 28: Progressivism and the Republican Roosevelt 1901-1912
- 28-1 Progressive Roots
- 28-2 Raking Muck with the Muckrakers
- 28-3 Political Progressivism
- 28-4 Progressivism in the Cities and States
- 28-5 Progressive Women
- 28-6 TR’s Square Deal for Labor
- 28-7 TR Corrals the Corporations
- 28-8 Caring for the Consumer
- 28-9 Earth Control
- 28-10 The “Roosevelt Panic” of 1907
- 28-11 The Rough Rider Thunders Out
- 28-12 Taft: A Round Peg in a Square Hole
- 28-13 The Dollar Goes Abroad as a Diplomat
- 28-14 Taft the Trustbuster
- 28-15 Taft Splits the Republican Party
- 28-16 The Taft-Roosevelt Rupture
- 28-17 The “Bull Moose” Campaign of 1912
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 29: Wilsonian Progressivism in Peace and War 1913-1920
- 29-1 Wilson: The Idealist in Politics
- 29-2 Wilson Tackles the Tariff
- 29-3 Wilson Battles the Bankers
- 29-4 The President Tames the Trusts
- 29-5 Wilson at the Peak
- 29-6 New Directions in Foreign Policy
- 29-7 Moralistic Diplomacy in Mexico
- 29-8 Thunder across the Sea
- 29-9 America Earns Blood Money
- 29-10 Wilson Wins Reelection in 1916
- 29-11 War by Act of Germany
- 29-12 Wilsonian Idealism Enthroned
- 29-13 Wilson’s Fourteen Potent Points
- 29-14 Manipulating Minds and Stifling Dissent
- 29-15 Forging a War Economy
- 29-16 Workers in Wartime
- 29-17 Suffering until Suffrage
- 29-18 Making Plowboys into Doughboys
- 29-19 America Helps Hammer the Hun
- 29-20 Wilson Steps Down from Olympus
- 29-21 An Idealist amid the Imperialists
- 29-22 Wilson’s Battle for Ratification
- 29-23 The “Solemn Referendum” of 1920
- 29-24 The Betrayal of Great Expectations
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 30: American Life in the “Roaring Twenties” 1920-1932
- 30-1 Putting America on Rubber Tires
- 30-2 The Advent of the Gasoline Age
- 30-3 Radio Waves and Filmland Fantasies
- 30-4 The Mass-Consumption Economy
- 30-5 The Dynamic Decade
- 30-6 Seeing Red
- 30-7 Hooded Hoodlums of the KKK
- 30-8 Stemming the Foreign Flood
- 30-9 The Prohibition “Experiment”
- 30-10 The Golden Age of Gangsterism
- 30-11 Monkey Business in Tennessee
- 30-12 Cultural Liberation
- 30-13 Wall Street’s Big Bull Market
- 30-14 The Republican “Old Guard” Returns
- 30-15 GOP Reaction at the Throttle
- 30-16 The Aftermath of War
- 30-17 America Seeks Benefits without Burdens
- 30-18 Hiking the Tariff Higher
- 30-19 The Stench of Scandal
- 30-20 “Silent Cal” Coolidge
- 30-21 Frustrated Farmers
- 30-22 A Three-Way Race for the White House in 1924
- 30-23 Foreign-Policy Flounderings
- 30-24 The Triumph of Herbert Hoover, 1928
- 30-25 President Hoover’s First Moves
- 30-26 The Great Crash Ends the Golden Twenties
- 30-27 Hooked on the Horn of Plenty
- 30-28 Rugged Times for Rugged Individualists
- 30-29 Hoover Battles the Great Depression
- 30-30 Routing the Bonus Army in Washington
- 30-31 Japanese Militarists Attack China
- 30-32 Hoover Pioneers the Good Neighbor Policy
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 31: The Great Depression and the New Deal 1933-1939
- 31-1 FDR: Politician in a Wheelchair
- 31-2 Presidential Hopefuls of 1932
- 31-3 Hoover’s Humiliation in 1932
- 31-4 FDR and the Three Rs: Relief, Recovery, Reform
- 31-5 Roosevelt Manages the Money
- 31-6 Creating Jobs for the Jobless
- 31-7 A Day for Every Demagogue
- 31-8 New Visibility for Women
- 31-9 Helping Industry and Labor
- 31-10 Paying Farmers Not to Farm
- 31-11 Dust Bowls and Black Blizzards
- 31-12 Battling Bankers and Big Business
- 31-13 The TVA Harnesses the Tennessee
- 31-14 Housing and Social Security
- 31-15 A New Deal for Labor
- 31-16 Landon Challenges “the Champ”
- 31-17 Nine Old Men on the Bench
- 31-18 The Court Changes Course
- 31-19 Twilight of the New Deal
- 31-20 New Deal or Raw Deal?
- 31-21 FDR’s Balance Sheet
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 32: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Shadow of War 1933-1941
- 32-1 The London Conference
- 32-2 Freedom for (from?) the Filipinos and Recognition for the Russians
- 32-3 Becoming a Good Neighbor
- 32-4 Secretary Hull’s Reciprocal Trade Agreements
- 32-5 Storm-Cellar Isolationism
- 32-6 Congress Legislates Neutrality
- 32-7 America Dooms Loyalist Spain
- 32-8 Appeasing Japan and Germany
- 32-9 Hitler’s Belligerency and U.S. Neutrality
- 32-10 The Fall of France
- 32-11 Refugees from the Holocaust
- 32-12 Bolstering Britain
- 32-13 Shattering the Two-Term Tradition
- 32-14 A Landmark Lend-Lease Law
- 32-15 Charting a New World
- 32-16 U.S. Destroyers and Hitler’s U-boats Clash
- 32-17 Surprise Assault on Pearl Harbor
- 32-18 America’s Transformation from Bystander to Belligerent
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 33: America in World War II 1941-1945
- 33-1 The Allies Trade Space for Time
- 33-2 The Shock of War
- 33-3 Building the War Machine
- 33-4 Manpower and Womanpower
- 33-5 Wartime Migrations
- 33-6 Holding the Home Front
- 33-7 The Rising Sun in the Pacific
- 33-8 Japan’s High Tide at Midway
- 33-9 American Leapfrogging toward Tokyo
- 33-10 The Allied Halting of Hitler
- 33-11 A Second Front from North Africa to Rome
- 33-12 D-Day: June 6, 1944
- 33-13 FDR: The Fourth-Termite of 1944
- 33-14 Roosevelt Defeats Dewey
- 33-15 The Last Days of Hitler
- 33-16 Japan Dies Hard
- 33-17 The Atomic Bombs
- 33-18 The Allies Triumphant
- Chapter Review
- Part 8: Making an American Superpower 1945-1980
- Chapter 34: The Cold War Begins 1945-1952
- 34-1 Truman: The “Gutty” Man from Missouri
- 34-2 Yalta: Bargain or Betrayal?
- 34-3 The United States and the Soviet Union
- 34-4 Shaping the Postwar World
- 34-5 The Problem of Germany
- 34-6 Cold War Deepens
- 34-7 Girding for the Cold War
- 34-8 Reconstruction and Revolution in Asia
- 34-9 The Korean Volcano Erupts
- 34-10 The Military Seesaw in Korea
- 34-11 The Cold War Home Front
- 34-12 Postwar Economic Anxieties
- 34-13 Democratic Divisions in 1948
- 34-14 The Long Economic Boom, 1950-1970
- 34-15 The Roots of Postwar Prosperity
- 34-16 The Smiling Sunbelt
- 34-17 The Rush to the Suburbs
- 34-18 The Postwar Baby Boom
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 35: American Zenith 1952-1963
- 35-1 Affluence and Its Anxieties
- 35-2 Consumer Culture in the Fifties
- 35-3 The Advent of Eisenhower
- 35-4 Desegregating American Society
- 35-5 Seeds of the Civil Rights Revolution
- 35-6 Eisenhower Republicanism at Home
- 35-7 A “New Look” in Foreign Policy
- 35-8 The Vietnam Nightmare
- 35-9 Cold War Crises in the Middle East
- 35-10 Round Two for Ike
- 35-11 The Continuing Cold War
- 35-12 Kennedy Challenges Nixon for the Presidency
- 35-13 A Cultural Renaissance
- 35-14 New Cultural Voices
- 35-15 Kennedy’s “New Frontier” Spirit
- 35-16 Foreign Flare-ups and “Flexible Response”
- 35-17 Cuban Confrontations
- 35-18 The Struggle for Civil Rights
- 35-19 The Killing of Kennedy
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 36: The Stormy Sixties 1963-1973
- 36-1 The LBJ Brand on the Presidency
- 36-2 Johnson Battles Goldwater in 1964
- 36-3 The Great Society Congress
- 36-4 Battling for Black Rights
- 36-5 Black Power
- 36-6 Vietnam Vexations
- 36-7 Vietnam Topples Johnson
- 36-8 The Presidential Sweepstakes of 1968
- 36-9 The Cultural Upheaval of the 1960s
- 36-10 Nixon Vietnamizes the War
- 36-11 Cambodianizing the Vietnam War
- 36-12 Nixon’s Detente with Beijing (Peking) and Moscow
- 36-13 A New Team on the Supreme Bench
- 36-14 Nixon on the Home Front
- 36-15 The Nixon Landslide of 1972
- 36-16 The Secret Bombing of Cambodia and the War Powers Act
- 36-17 The Arab Oil Embargo and the Energy Crisis
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 37: A Sea of Troubles 1973-1980
- 37-1 Watergate and the Unmaking of a President
- 37-2 Sources of Stagnation
- 37-3 The First Unelected President
- 37-4 Defeat in Vietnam
- 37-5 Feminist Victories and Defeats
- 37-6 The Seventies in Black and White
- 37-7 The Bicentennial Campaign
- 37-8 Carter’s Humanitarian Diplomacy
- 37-9 Economic and Energy Woes
- 37-10 The Turn toward the Market
- 37-11 Foreign Affairs and the Iranian Imbroglio
- Chapter Review
- Part 9: Sustaining Democracy in a Global Age 1980 to the Present
- Chapter 38: The Resurgence of Conservatism 1980-1992
- 38-1 The Election of Ronald Reagan, 1980
- 38-2 The Reagan Revolution
- 38-3 The Battle of the Budget
- 38-4 Reagan Renews the Cold War
- 38-5 Troubles Abroad
- 38-6 Round Two for Reagan
- 38-7 The Iran-Contra Imbroglio
- 38-8 Reagan’s Economic Legacy
- 38-9 The Religious Right
- 38-10 Conservatism in the Courts
- 38-11 Referendum on Reaganism in 1988
- 38-12 George H. W. Bush and the End of the Cold War
- 38-13 The Persian Gulf Crisis
- 38-14 Bush on the Home Front
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 39: America Confronts the Post-Cold War Era 1992-2000
- 39-1 Bill Clinton: The First Baby-Boomer President
- 39-2 A False Start for Reform
- 39-3 The Politics of Distrust
- 39-4 Clinton Comes Back
- 39-5 Racial Progress and Perils
- 39-6 Globalization and Its Discontents
- 39-7 The Feminist Revolution
- 39-8 Searching for a Post-Cold War Foreign Policy
- 39-9 Scandal and Impeachment
- 39-10 Clinton’s Legacy and the 2000 Election
- 39-11 E Pluribus Plures
- 39-12 Culture and Society at Century’s End
- 39-13 Niche Nation
- Chapter Review
- Chapter 40: The American People Face a New Century 2001-2018
- 40-1 Bush Begins
- 40-2 Terrorism Comes to America
- 40-3 Bush Takes the Offensive against Iraq
- 40-4 Owning Iraq
- 40-5 Reelecting George W. Bush
- 40-6 Bush’s Bruising Second Term
- 40-7 The Presidential Election of 2008
- 40-8 Obama in the White House
- 40-9 Back to Backlash
- 40-10 New Directions in Foreign Policy
- 40-11 The Politics of Inequality
- 40-12 Battling for the White House in 2012
- 40-13 Second-Term Stalemate
- 40-14 The Immigration Impasse
- 40-15 Civil Rights and Civil Liberties
- 40-16 An Age of Distrust
- 40-17 Obama’s Troubled Last Years
- 40-18 The Astonishing Election of 2016
- 40-19 Trump in Power
- 40-20 The World Warily Watches Washington
- 40-21 The American Prospect
- Chapter Review
- Documents
- Tables
- Glossary of Key Terms
- Index
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