Revel for American Stories A History of the United States, Combined Volume -- Access Card

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Edition: 4th
Format: Nonspecific Binding
Pub. Date: 2018-01-01
Publisher(s): Pearson
List Price: $79.99

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Summary

For survey courses in U.S. History
 
An accessible exploration of America’s rich, complex past
Revel™ American Stories: A History of the United State s helps students to see beyond the assortment of facts that make up U.S. history so they can truly understand the story of our nation. Via a streamlined, powerful narrative, authors H. W. Brands, T. H. Breen, Ariela J. Gross, and R. Hal Williams present coverage of the dilemmas, choices, and decisions made by the American people, as well as by their leaders, that helped shape America. Through new embedded videos and engaging interactive features, the 4th Edition connects these American people and their decisions with time and place, enabling students to better think both critically and historically.

Revel is Pearson’s newest way of delivering our respected content. Fully digital and highly engaging, Revel replaces the textbook and gives students everything they need for the course. Informed by extensive research on how people read, think, and learn, Revel is an interactive learning environment that enables students to read, practice, and study in one continuous experience — for less than the cost of a traditional textbook.

NOTE: Revel is a fully digital delivery of Pearson content. This ISBN is for the standalone Revel access card. In addition to this access card, you will need a course invite link, provided by your instructor, to register for and use Revel.

 

Author Biography

H.W. Brands Henry William Brands was born in Oregon, went to college in California, sold cutlery across the American West, and earned graduate degrees in mathematics and history in Oregon and Texas. He taught at Vanderbilt University and Texas A&M University before joining the faculty at the University of Texas at Austin, where he holds the Jack S. Blanton Sr. Chair in History. He writes on American history and politics, with books including The General vs. the President, Reagan, The Man Who Saved the Union, Traitor to His Class, Andrew Jackson, The Age of Gold, The First American, and TR. Several of his books have been bestsellers; two, Traitor to His Class and The First American, were finalists for the Pulitzer Prize. He lectures frequently on historical and current events, and can be seen and heard on national and international television and radio programs. His writings have been translated into Spanish, French, German, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Ukrainian.


T. H. Breen T.H. Breen, currently the William Smith Mason Professor of American History at Northwestern University Emeritus, the James Marsh Professor At-Large at the University of Vermont, and the John Kluge Professor of American Law and Governance at the Library of Congress, received a Ph.D. from Yale University. At Northwestern, he was the founding director of the Kaplan Center for the Humanities and the Chabraja Center for Historical Studies. Breen has published eight books on Early American and Revolutionary History, including, “Marketplace of Revolution,” “American Insurgents: American Partriots,” and “George Washington’s Journey: The President Forges a New Nation.” His writings have won awards from the Historic Preservation Society, Society of Colonial Wars, and Society of the Cincinnati. Several foundations and libraries have supported his research: Institute for Advanced Study (Princeton), Humboldt Foundation, Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, Colonial Williamsburg, and Huntington Library. Breen has held appointments at the California Institute of Technology, Chicago University, Yale University, Oxford University, and Cambridge University. He is now completing a study of the American Revolution for Harvard University Press entitled “An Appeal to Heaven: The American Revolution.” 


Ariela J. Gross Ariela Gross is John B. and Alice R. Sharp Professor of Law and History, and Co-Director of the Center for Law, History and Culture, at the University of Southern California. She has been a visiting Professor at Stanford University, Tel Aviv University, the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, the Université de Paris 8, and Kyoto University. Her book What Blood Won’t Tell: A History of Race on Trial in America (Harvard University Press, 2008, ppb. 2010), a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2009, was awarded the J. Willard Hurst Prize for outstanding scholarship in sociolegal history by the Law and Society Association, the Lillian Smith Book Award for a book that illuminates the people and problems of the South, and the American Political Science Association’s award for the best book on race, ethnicity, and politics. Gross is also the author of Double Character: Slavery and Mastery in the Antebellum Southern Courtroom (Princeton University Press, 2000; ppb., University of Georgia Press, 2006), and numerous articles and book chapters. She edited a symposium in the February 2017 issue of Law and History Review on Slavery and The Boundaries of Legality, Past and Present. Her research has been supported by a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship, an American Council for Learned Societies Collaborative Research Fellowship in 2017-19 and a Frederick J. Burkhardt Fellowship in 2003-04, a Stanford Center for the Advanced Study of the Behavioral Sciences Fellowship, as well as an NEH Long-Term Fellowship at the Huntington Library. She is currently working on a comparative history of law, race, slavery and freedom in the Americas with Alejandro De La Fuente, the Robert Woods Bliss Professor of Latin American History and Economics at Harvard University.


R. Hal Williams R. Hal Williams was professor of history emeritus at Southern Methodist University. He received his A.B. from Princeton University in 1963 and his Ph.D. from Yale University in 1968. His books include The Democratic Party and California Politics, 1880–1896 (1973); Years of Decision: American Politics in the 1890s (1978); The Manhattan Project: A Documentary Introduction to the Atomic Age (1990); and Realigning America: McKinley, Bryan, and the Remarkable Election of 1896 (2010). A specialist in American political history, he taught at Yale University from 1968 to 1975 and came to SMU in 1975 as chair of the Department of History. From 1980 to 1988, he served as dean of Dedman College, the school of humanities and sciences, and then as dean of Research and Graduate Studies. In 1980, he was a visiting professor at University College, Oxford University. Williams has received grants from the American Philosophical Society and the National Endowment for the Humanities, and he has served on the Texas Committee for the Humanities. Mr. Williams passed away in February of 2016.




Table of Contents

1. New World Encounters: Preconquest–1608
2. England's New World Experiments, 1607–1732
3. Putting Down Roots: Opportunity and Oppression in Colonial Society, 1619–1692
4. Experience of Empire: Eighteenth-Century America, 1680–1763
5. The American Revolution: From Elite Protest to Popular Revolt, 1763–1783
6. The Republican Experiment, 1783–1788
7. Democracy and Dissent: The Violence of Party Politics, 1788–1800
8. Republican Ascendancy: The Jeffersonian Vision, 1800–1814
9. Nation Building and Nationalism, 1815–1825
10. The Triumph of White Men's Democracy, 1824–1840
11. Slaves and Masters, 1793–1861
12. The Pursuit of Perfection, 1800–1861
13. An Age of Expansionism, 1830–1861
14. The Sectional Crisis, 1846–1861
15. Secession and the Civil War, 1860–1865
16. The Agony of Reconstruction, 1865–1877
17. The West: Exploiting an Empire, 1849–1902
18. The Industrial Society, 1850–1901
19. Toward an Urban Society, 1877–1900
20. Political Realignments, 1876–1901
21. Toward Empire, 1865–1902
22. The Progressive Era, 1895–1917
23. From Roosevelt to Wilson in the Age of Progressivism, 1900–1920
24. The Nation at War, 1901–1920
25. Transition to Modern America, 1919–1928
26. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1929–1939
27. America and the World, 1921–1945
28. The Onset of the Cold War, 1945–1960
29. Affluence and Anxiety, 1945–1960
30. The Turbulent Sixties, 1960–1968
31. To a New Conservatism, 1969–1988
32. Into the Twenty-First Century, 1989–2016

Volume I includes chapters 1–16; Volume II includes chapters 16–32.

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