Unto a Good Land, Volume 2 : A History of the American People: From 1865

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2005-08-30
Publisher(s): Eerdmans Pub Co
List Price: $47.99

Buy New

Usually Ships in 8 - 10 Business Days.
$46.55

Buy Used

In Stock
$34.55

Rent Book

Select for Price
There was a problem. Please try again later.

eBook

We're Sorry
Not Available

This item is being sold by an Individual Seller and will not ship from the Online Bookstore's warehouse. The Seller must confirm the order within two business days. If the Seller refuses to sell or fails to confirm within this time frame, then the order is cancelled.

Please be sure to read the Description offered by the Seller.

Summary

"Unto a Good Land offers a distinctive narrative history of the American people -- from the first contacts between Europeans and North America's native inhabitants, through the creation of a modern nation, to the standing of the United States as a world power. Written by a team of distinguished historians led by David Edwin Harrell, Jr. and Edwin S. Gaustad, this textbook shows how grasping the uniqueness of the bAmerican experimentb depends on understanding the role of religion as well as social, cultural, political, and economic factors in shaping U.S. history.A common shortcoming of most United States history textbooks is that while, in recent decades, they have expanded their coverage of social and cultural history, they still tend to shortchange the role of religious ideas, practices, and movements in the American past. "Unto a Good Land addresses this shortcoming in a balanced way. The authors recognize that religion is only one of many factors that have influenced our past -- one, however, that has often been neglected in textbook accounts. This volume gives religion its appropriate place in the story."Unprecedented coverage of the forces that have shaped the history of the United States While none of America's rich history is left out, this volume is the first U.S. history textbook to give serious attention to the religious dimension of American life. This textbook is not a religious history; instead, it offers an account of American history that includes religious ideas, practices, and movements whenever they played a shaping role."Comprehensive and current This volume traces the American story from the earliest encounters between the first North Americaninhabitants and Europeans through the 2004 presidential election. Complete and balanced treatment is also given to issues of gender, race, and ethnicity, as well as cultural, political, and economic forces."A clear and compelling narrative The authors are more than expert historians; they are also talented writers who recognize history to be the retelling of human life. United by a seamless narrative structure, these chapters restore the bstoryb to history."Multiple formats specially designed for flexible classroom use "Unto a Good Land is available as a single hardcover edition or as two paperback volumes, offering maximum flexibility when adapting curriculum for one- and two-semester courses in U.S. history. The two paperback volumes can be used for U.S. history survey courses divided at 1865 or 1900 -- or at any date in between."Informative special features to complement the text In addition to the book's exceptional narrative, an array of special features enhances the instructional value of the text and points students to resources for further study."Includes assistance for teaching and test preparation The instructor's manual for "Unto a Good Land provides helpful suggestions for lesson plans and assignments, and the test bank provides multiple-choice and essay questions for use as study aids, quizzes, or tests."Suitable for instruction at both secular and religious colleges and universities Drawing on their experience in both secular and religious schools, the authors have ensured that this textbook is suitable for U.S. history classes in a wide variety of settings.

Table of Contents

Table of Features
xvii
Preface xix
Reviewer Acknowledgments xxii
About the Authors xxiii
Reconstruction and the New South
511(38)
Wartime Reconstruction
512(25)
The Thirteenth Amendment
514(1)
Andrew Johnson and ``Restoration''
515(1)
A Defiant South
516(2)
The First Congressional Reconstruction Plan
518(2)
The Fourteenth Amendment
520(2)
The Second Congressional Reconstruction Plan
522(1)
The Impeachment of Johnson
522(1)
The Fifteenth Amendment
523(1)
The Supreme Court and Reconstruction
524(1)
Forming Reconstruction Governments in the South
525(2)
The New Southern Electorate
527(1)
Republican Governments in Action
528(2)
White Violence
530(2)
The Disputed Election of 1876
532(2)
Democratic Governments in a ``Redeemed'' South
534(1)
The Populist Challenge and the End of Black Voting
535(2)
The Rise of Jim Crow
537(1)
The Supreme Court and Jim Crow
538(1)
Black Exertions for Freedom
538(7)
The Church
539(2)
The School
541(1)
Booker T. Washington and Self-Help
542(1)
Land and Labor
543(2)
The ``New South'' Promise
545(2)
Conclusion: The South at Century's End
547(2)
Remaking the Trans-Mississippi Wests
549(38)
Native Peoples
550(3)
Diverse Ways of Life in the Southwest and Northwest
550(1)
Hunting Buffalo on the Great Plains
551(1)
Tribal Beliefs, Relations, and Practices
552(1)
The Indian Wars
553(7)
Challenges of White Settlement
553(1)
Local Militia
554(1)
Total War
554(1)
Negotiations and Reservations
555(2)
The Great Sioux War
557(2)
Devastation of the Buffalo Herds
559(1)
Surrender and Flight
560(1)
Attempts at Assimilation
560(5)
Partnership of Church and State
560(1)
Arousing Public Concern
561(1)
A Three-Pronged Approach: Education, Suppression, and Allotment
561(4)
New Settlers in the West
565(3)
Long Overland Journeys
565(1)
The Rise of the Railroads
566(1)
Settlers from Overseas and the Eastern States
567(1)
Mining the West
568(5)
Dreams of Gold
569(1)
Booming Towns and States
570(1)
Boom and Bust Economies
571(1)
Establishing Law and Order
572(1)
Cattle and Cowboys on the Plains
573(4)
Driving Cattle to Market
573(1)
Cowboy Culture
574(1)
Fences and Water Rights
575(1)
Natural Changes and Challenges
576(1)
Sheep versus Cattle
577(1)
Farming the West
577(4)
Free Land, Harsh Conditions
578(1)
New Technologies and Tactics
579(1)
The Rise of Agribusiness
579(2)
Farm Life and Community on the Plains
581(2)
Challenges of Settling Down
581(1)
Coming Together as Communities
582(1)
Immigrant Settlements and Americanization
582(1)
The West(s) of Imagination
583(1)
Conclusion: Profits and ``Progress''
584(3)
The New Industrial Order
587(34)
Post-Civil War National Economic Expectations
588(1)
The Railroads
589(6)
Building an Integrated Railway System
591(1)
Government Aid to Railroad Construction
592(1)
Travel by Train
593(2)
The Managerial Revolution
595(5)
Managerial Control
595(1)
Information and Management
596(1)
Business Education
597(1)
Taylorism and Scientific Management
598(2)
Thomas Edison and Industrial Technology
600(3)
Big Business America
603(9)
Andrew Carnegie and Big Steel
603(2)
Vertical and Horizontal Integration
605(2)
Competition and Combination
607(2)
Competition and Government Regulation
609(2)
The Bankers Step In
611(1)
The Character of Wealth
612(1)
Organized Labor
612(7)
Working-Class Protests and Strikes
614(3)
National Unions
617(2)
Conclusion: New Divides
619(2)
The Modern Industrial City, 1850-1900
621(36)
Peopling the Modern City
621(3)
Urban Growth
622(2)
The Lure of the City
624(1)
The New Immigration
624(9)
The Golden Door
625(2)
Restrictions on Immigration
627(1)
Immigrant Employment and Destinations
628(2)
The Immigrant Enclave
630(1)
Immigrant Religion
630(1)
Community and Identity
631(1)
Becoming American in the Immigrant City
632(1)
The New Face of the City
633(11)
The Development of Mass Transportation
634(1)
The Skyscraper
635(1)
The Palace of Consumption
636(2)
Urban Lifestyles
638(3)
Slums
641(3)
The Struggle for Control of the City
644(3)
City Machine Politics
644(3)
Awakening Social Conscience
647(7)
Early Efforts at Reform
647(3)
The Social Gospel
650(3)
The Settlement House
653(1)
The City Enters the New Century
654(1)
Conclusion: Points of Convergence in the American City
655(2)
Post-Civil War Thought and Culture
657(36)
National Culture and Faith in Progress
658(12)
Publishing: National and Local
659(1)
Modern Metropolitan Culture: The Growing Authority of Science and Progress
660(4)
Expertise
664(5)
Pragmatism and Religion
669(1)
Dissenting Views of Progress
670(8)
Rural and Small-Town North
670(4)
Negotiating Change in the Rural North
674(3)
The Distinctive South
677(1)
Divergent Subcultures
678(13)
Immigrants Encounter the New World
679(3)
Workers Respond to Industrial Progress
682(4)
Radical Visions of Progress
686(2)
Radical Critiques of Progress
688(3)
Conclusion: Voicing Alternatives
691(2)
The Politics of the Gilded Age
693(30)
Political Parties and Political Stalemate
694(4)
A Delicate Balance of Power
694(1)
Muted Differences
694(2)
Political Culture
696(1)
Lingering Effects of the Civil War
697(1)
Getting Out the Vote
698(4)
The Spectacle of Campaigns
698(2)
Women's Influence
700(2)
Reining in the Spoilsmen
702(4)
The Appeal of Civil Service Reform
703(1)
Newspapers and Reform
703(1)
Impetus for Reform
704(2)
The Presidency and Congress Remade
706(4)
The Money Question
710(1)
The Depression of 1893 and the Gold Standard
711(4)
The Populist Challenge
715(3)
Farmers Come Together
715(2)
Populist Themes
717(1)
The Cross of Gold and the Election of 1896
718(3)
Conclusion: The End of the Old and the Rise of the New
721(2)
Innocents Abroad: Expansion and Empire, America and the World, 1865-1900
723(26)
Limits on Expansionism and Empire
724(2)
Forces for Expansion and Interest Overseas
726(3)
Securing North America
729(1)
Latin American Relations
730(3)
Pan-Americanism
731(1)
Rattling Sabers at the British
732(1)
American Business Interests
733(1)
Island Hopping in the Pacific
733(3)
An Open Door to China
736(2)
The Cuban Crisis
738(2)
A ``Splendid Little War''
740(2)
The Great Debate over Imperialism
742(4)
Annexation?
743(3)
A Foundation for Nation-Building
746(1)
Conclusion: America and the World in 1900
746(3)
In Search of Efficiency: The Values and Ideology of Progressivism, 1900--1917
749(36)
The Promise of a New Century
750(9)
Foundations of the American Dream
751(1)
Prosperity and Industrial Concentration
751(2)
Advertising the Nation's Success
753(2)
The Mass Pursuit of the Good Life
755(4)
The Search for Order and a Place in the Republic
759(14)
Diluting the WASP Consensus
759(3)
Sectional Variations on the American Theme
762(2)
African Americans --- the Invisible Americans
764(2)
Women --- Americans Who Would Be Heard
766(1)
``A Christian People''
767(1)
Protestants
768(1)
Catholics
768(1)
The Growth of Class Consciousness
769(1)
Religion from the Bottom Up
769(1)
The Growth of Professionalism
770(1)
Labor Gains and Labor Radicalism
771(2)
From Providence to Progress
773(10)
The Populist Heritage
774(1)
Muckrakers
774(1)
The Secularization of the American University
775(1)
Progressive Education
776(2)
A Theoretical Base for Progressivism
778(1)
The Heyday of American Socialism
779(1)
The Divided Mind of American Protestantism
780(3)
Conclusion: Progress and Progressivism
783(2)
Progressivism in American Politics, 1901 to World War I
785(30)
The Core of the Progressive Agenda
786(4)
The Urban Social Justice Movement
786(2)
Saving the WASP Empire
788(2)
Local and State Political Reform
790(4)
Reorganizing American Cities
790(1)
Progressivism in the States
791(1)
Electoral Reform --- Democratic and Undemocratic
792(1)
States Provide Models for Progressive Legislation
793(1)
Theodore Roosevelt and the Selling of National Progressivism
794(8)
Theodore Roosevelt Takes Center Stage
794(2)
The Extension of Regulation and Trustbusting
796(2)
Political Victory and the Square Deal
798(2)
A Beginning for Conservation
800(2)
Roosevelt Drifts to the Left
802(1)
Competing Progressive Visions
802(6)
Roosevelt Picks His Successor
802(1)
Taft Alienates the Progressives
803(3)
The Rift between Roosevelt and Taft
806(1)
The Election of 1912
806(2)
Wilsonian Progressivism
808(5)
The Scholar President
808(1)
Congress Backs the President
809(2)
Expanding the New Freedom
811(2)
Conclusion: The Legacy of Political Progressivism
813(2)
A Sense of Mission: The United States in World Affairs, 1900--1920
815(38)
Roosevelt, Taft, and the World
816(9)
Missions Lead the Way Abroad
817(1)
Roosevelt and the Expansion of American Influence
818(1)
Peacemaking in the Pacific
819(2)
Tensions in Europe
821(1)
Wielding a ``Big Stick'' in Latin America
821(3)
Taft's Dollar Diplomacy
824(1)
Wilson Defines America's Moral Mission
825(7)
The Flowering of the American Peace Movement
825(1)
Wilson as Moralist and Realist
826(1)
Wilson and the Mexican Revolution
826(2)
Keeping Us out of War
828(3)
The Election of 1916
831(1)
Making the World Safe for Democracy
832(11)
Germany's Fateful Decision and Wilson's Troubled Choice
832(2)
The Call to Arms
834(2)
The American Expeditionary Force Contributes
836(2)
Organizing the Nation for War
838(2)
Rallying around the Flag
840(2)
Patriotism and Repression
842(1)
From Victory to Disillusionment
843(8)
From the Fourteen Points to the Peace of Paris
844(3)
America Rejects the Treaty of Versailles
847(1)
A Troubled Society
848(2)
The Red Scare
850(1)
Conclusion: The United States Becomes a World Power
851(2)
An Exhilarating Decade: American Life in the 1920s
853(34)
A Decade of Relative Prosperity
855(8)
Welfare Capitalism and the Decline of Unionism
855(1)
The Consumer Boom Gathers Steam
856(1)
Americans on the Road and in the Air
857(3)
A Leisure Society
860(3)
Winds of Change
863(5)
The New Science
863(1)
The Literature of Revolt
864(1)
The New Morality and the New Woman
865(1)
The ``New Negro''
866(2)
Conservative Backlash
868(8)
Religious Diversity and Confrontation
868(4)
Nativist Fears and Immigration Restrictions
872(1)
The Case against Foreigners
873(1)
The Ku Klux Klan Defines ``Pure Americanism''
874(1)
The Failure of Prohibition
874(2)
The Spread of Organized Crime
876(1)
High Republican Politics
876(9)
The Election of 1920
876(1)
Harding and the Return to ``Normalcy''
877(3)
Calvin Coolidge Rides the Boom
880(1)
The Coolidge Boom
881(1)
The Election of 1928
882(1)
The Great Engineer at the Wheel
883(1)
Boom and Bust in the Stock Market
884(1)
Conclusion: A Decade of Prosperity and Self-Analysis
885(2)
The Great Depression and the New Deal
887(36)
Hoover Struggles with a Deepening Depression
888(7)
The Great Depression and Its Causes
888(1)
Hoover's Considered Response to a Worsening Collapse
889(2)
Too Little Too Late: Democrats and Republicans Attempt Reform
891(1)
The Election of 1932
892(2)
The Interregnum --- the Depression's Darkest Hour
894(1)
Franklin D. Roosevelt and the First New Deal, 1933--1934
895(12)
The Roosevelt Persona
895(3)
The Hundred Days
898(1)
Roosevelt and the Moneychangers
899(2)
Relief and Public Works
901(1)
Conservation and Regional Planning
902(2)
The Beginning of Agricultural Subsidies
904(2)
The Blue Eagle Soars and Falters
906(1)
Labor Supports the New Deal
907(1)
Completing the First New Deal
907(1)
The Second New Deal and the Emergence of the Welfare State, 1935--1936
907(8)
A Democratic Sweep in 1934
908(1)
Radical Alternatives
909(2)
Launching the Second New Deal
911(1)
Extending Relief and Hoping for Recovery
911(1)
Agriculture and the Second New Deal
912(1)
Social Security and the Wealth-Tax Act
913(2)
The Triumph of Labor
915(1)
The Limits of Reform
915(5)
The Democratic Sweep of 1936
915(1)
A Faltering Recovery and Labor Unrest
916(2)
The ``Court-Packing'' Fight
918(1)
The Primaries Purge of 1938
919(1)
The New Deal Ends
920(1)
Conclusion: The Depression and the Political Transformation of America
920(3)
Depression Decade
923(32)
Depression Moods
924(11)
A People Beset
925(1)
On the Road
926(1)
Family Strains and Future Hopes
926(2)
Extremist Echoes in Depression Thought
928(1)
The Red Romance
929(2)
The Center Holds
931(1)
The Great Education Debate
931(3)
Religion Retreats from Reform
934(1)
The Regrouping of America: Ethnicity, Class, and Religion in the Depression Decade
935(9)
Accelerating Ethnic Assimilation
936(1)
Decentralizing Tendencies in Unions and Churches
936(2)
Gains and Setbacks for Women
938(1)
Patterns of Discrimination
939(4)
Expanding Regional Sensibilities
943(1)
The Arts Serve the Nation
944(9)
Depression Literature: Suffering, Endurance, Patriotism
944(3)
Art and Architecture Turn Serious
947(1)
Radio Unites the Nation
948(2)
Movies Come of Age
950(1)
Life Goes On
951(2)
Conclusion: The Depression Legacy
953(2)
The Dilemmas of Power: America and the World, 1921-1945
955(34)
The Ambivalent Giant
956(2)
Internationalism and Its Limits in the 1920s
956(1)
Assertiveness in Latin America
957(1)
Tensions with Japan and Russia
958(1)
The Long Shadows of War
959(10)
The Rise of the Axis Powers
960(1)
Appeasement and Isolationism
961(2)
The Outbreak of War in Europe, 1938--1939
963(1)
American Response to European War: 1939--1941
964(2)
Toward Belligerency
966(2)
The Open Door Shuts
968(1)
Pearl Harbor
968(1)
The United States at War
969(10)
Forging Allied Strategy
969(2)
Turning the Pacific Tide
971(1)
Mobilizing ``the Arsenal of Democracy''
972(2)
Loyalty on the Home Front
974(1)
The Return of Prosperity and the Wartime Consumer
974(1)
Women at War
975(1)
Wartime Roots of the Civil Rights Movement
975(1)
Other Outsiders
976(1)
The Japanese Internment
977(1)
God at War
978(1)
``Dr. Win-the-War'' and the 1944 Election
978(1)
Victory
979(9)
Wartime Diplomacy
979(1)
Liberating Western Europe
980(2)
Ending of the War in the Pacific
982(1)
The Manhattan Project and the Beginning of the Nuclear Age
983(1)
The GI's War
984(1)
Learning of the Holocaust
985(1)
Creating a New International Order
985(2)
Constructing the United Nations and an International Framework
987(1)
Conclusion: A Nation Transformed by War
988(1)
In the Shadow of the Bomb: The Cold War in the Truman Years
989(30)
Paths Back to Normal Life
990(5)
Harry S Truman
990(1)
Reconversion and the Baby Boom
991(1)
Prices, Wages, and Strikes
992(1)
The Eightieth Congress
993(1)
Toward the Good Life
993(1)
``To Secure These Rights''
994(1)
The Cold War Begins
995(7)
The Iron Curtain Descends
996(1)
Planning for National Security
996(1)
The Truman Doctrine and the Marshall Plan
997(2)
Strategies for the Cold War
999(1)
``Containment'' Takes Shape
1000(1)
Reviving Western Germany and the Berlin Blockade
1001(1)
Truman's Second Administration: The Fair Deal and a Global Cold War
1002(9)
Truman's Stunning Victory
1002(2)
The Fair Deal
1004(1)
Ever-Colder War
1004(1)
NATO and the Building of the Western Alliance
1005(1)
The Soviet Atom Bomb and the Remobilization of the American Military
1006(1)
Cold War in Asia
1007(2)
The Korean War
1009(2)
Espionage, Anti-Communism, and McCarthyism
1011(6)
Espionage and Security
1011(2)
The Politics and Religion of Anti-Communism
1013(2)
McCarthyism
1015(2)
Conclusion: An Anxious Age
1017(2)
Containment, Contentment, Discontent: Eisenhower Republicanism and the Fifties
1019(32)
Dwight D. Eisenhower and the New Republicanism
1020(5)
The Election of 1952
1020(1)
An American Hero
1021(2)
Curtailing Federal Influence
1023(1)
The Interstate Highway System
1023(1)
The Election of 1956
1024(1)
The Second Reconstruction
1025(4)
Patterns of Inequality
1025(1)
Judicial Action and Southern Resistance
1026(2)
New Strategies and New Leaders
1028(1)
Confronting International Communism: The Eisenhower Strategy of Containment
1029(7)
John Foster Dulles: Moralist and Pragmatist
1029(1)
Leashing Chiang
1030(1)
Nationalism and Marxism in the Third World
1030(1)
The New Look for Defense
1031(1)
America and the Third World
1032(2)
The ``Missile Gap''
1034(1)
The Cold War Warms and Thaws
1035(1)
Society and Culture at Mid-Century
1036(13)
Affluent America
1036(2)
Dwindling Diversity
1038(1)
The Flowering of American Education
1038(1)
Fifties Families
1039(1)
Cars and Subdivisions Alter the Landscape
1040(1)
Consumer Goods and Entertainment
1041(1)
Art and Literature, Popular and Critical
1042(2)
Music: Serious, Popular, and ``Rock `n' Roll''
1044(1)
The Religious Boom
1044(2)
Religious Superstars and Media Religion
1046(2)
Consensus, Conformity, and Criticism
1048(1)
Conclusion: Conservatism, Consensus, and Conscience
1049(2)
The Climax of Liberalism in the Sixties and Seventies
1051(30)
The Ideological and Cultural Sources of Sixties Liberalism
1052(11)
The Flowering of Postwar Liberalism
1052(1)
The Accelerating Civil Rights Revolution
1053(3)
The Black Pride Movement and the Rise of Black Militancy
1056(2)
The New Women's Movement
1058(2)
Gay and Lesbian Rights
1060(1)
The Rising Hispanic Consciousness
1060(2)
Native Americans Assert Their Rights
1062(1)
The New Left and the Counterculture
1063(6)
The Rise of the New Left
1064(1)
Revolt on Campus
1064(2)
Hippies and the Counterculture
1066(1)
From Folk to Rock
1067(1)
Drug Use and New Sexual Mores
1068(1)
Environmentalism
1068(1)
Conservatism and Mainstream American Culture in the Sixties and Seventies
1069(10)
The Postwar Conservative Intelligentsia
1070(1)
Popular Conservatism
1071(1)
Backlash against Social Change and Disruption
1071(1)
Mainstream Issues: Crime and Education
1072(1)
Trouble in the Religious Mainstream
1073(1)
The Changing Face of American Catholicism
1073(1)
New Religious Movements
1074(1)
The Evangelical Revival and the Rise of the Religious Right
1075(1)
The Pentecostal Revival and the Rise of Televangelism
1076(1)
Television, Movies, and Popular Music
1076(2)
The Burgeoning Sports Craze
1078(1)
The Arts and Literature
1078(1)
Conclusion: Coming Apart and Holding Together
1079(2)
The Liberal Hour: Politics in the Sixties
1081(30)
John F. Kennedy and the New Frontier
1082(6)
The Election of 1960
1082(1)
The Kennedy Mystique
1083(2)
The Best and the Brightest
1085(1)
The New Frontier at Home
1085(1)
Kennedy and Civil Rights
1086(2)
The Perils of Containment: The Kennedy Foreign Policy
1088(5)
Cold War Legacy
1088(1)
The Bay of Pigs
1088(1)
Kennedy and Khrushchev
1089(1)
The Cuban Missile Crisis
1090(1)
Growing Crisis in Vietnam
1091(1)
Assassination and Legacy
1092(1)
Lyndon Johnson and the Reshaping of America
1093(8)
A Rage for Reform: The Political Character of Lyndon Johnson
1093(1)
Johnson Takes Charge
1094(2)
The Election of 1964
1096(1)
Constructing the Great Society
1097(2)
The Warren Court under Siege
1099(1)
Johnson Presses Civil Rights
1099(1)
The Johnson Domestic Legacy
1100(1)
Lyndon Johnson, the Cold War, and the Dilemma of Vietnam
1101(6)
The Vietnam Quagmire
1101(1)
Gulf of Tonkin and the Expansion of the War
1102(1)
New Tactics --- Search and Destroy
1103(1)
The United States at War
1103(1)
Growing Dissent at Home
1104(1)
The Wages of Globalism --- Latin America, the Middle East, and Detente
1105(1)
Tet and the Devolution of the Johnson Administration
1106(1)
Winding Down the Liberal Experiment
1107(2)
More Assassinations
1107(1)
The Raucous Democratic Convention in Chicago
1108(1)
The Political Reincarnation of Richard Nixon
1108(1)
The Election of 1968
1109(1)
Conclusion: The Legacy of Sixties Liberalism
1109(2)
A Nation Beset: Politics from Nixon to Reagan
1111(30)
The Nixon Years on the Home Front
1112(6)
The Political Persona of Richard Nixon
1112(1)
The Southern Strategy and the Building of Modern Republicanism
1113(1)
The Supreme Court Moves to the Right
1114(1)
The War on Crime and Radicalism
1114(1)
Opening the Debate on Welfare and the Family Assistance Program
1115(1)
The New Federalism
1116(1)
Seeking a Balance on the Environment
1116(1)
Stagflation and the Decline of the American Economy
1117(1)
Equal Rights?
1118(1)
Nixon, Kissinger, and Realpolitik
1118(6)
Nixon and Kissinger
1118(1)
``Peace with Honor'' in Vietnam
1119(1)
Arms Control Stalemate
1120(1)
Mounting Opposition to the War in Vietnam
1120(1)
Cambodia and Kent State
1121(2)
Congressional Revolt and the Deterioration of Public Support
1123(1)
To the Brink of Peace
1123(1)
Openings to Beijing and Moscow
1123(1)
Nixon's Disastrous Second Term
1124(5)
The Election of 1972
1124(1)
Exiting the Quagmire
1125(1)
The Yom Kippur War
1126(1)
Watergate
1127(1)
The Unraveling of the Presidency
1127(2)
America on Hold
1129(11)
Interregnum: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford
1130(1)
The Election of 1976
1131(1)
Discovering Jimmy Carter
1132(1)
The Economic Crisis and Carter's Domestic Agenda
1133(1)
Losing the Battle for Energy Independence
1134(1)
The Carter Foreign Policy --- Human Rights and Open Diplomacy
1134(1)
A Freeze on Detente
1135(1)
The United States and the Developing Nations
1135(2)
The Middle East: Breakthrough and Hostages
1137(1)
The Election of 1980
1138(2)
Conclusion: A Nation Beset
1140(1)
A Turn to the Right: The Reagan and First Bush Presidencies
1141(26)
American Politics Turns to the Right
1142(5)
Ronald Reagan and the Politics of Conservatism
1143(1)
Constructing a Republican Coalition
1143(1)
The Reagan Administration
1144(1)
Supply Side Economics
1145(1)
Economic Resurgence
1145(1)
Expanding the Military
1146(1)
Cutting Government
1147(1)
Reheating the Cold War
1147(3)
Terrorism
1148(1)
An Easy Victory: Grenada
1148(1)
A Protracted Mess: Iran, Nicaragua, and Iran-Contra
1148(1)
Reagan, Gorbachev, and Perestroika
1149(1)
Four More Years
1150(3)
The Deficit Spiral
1151(1)
Deregulation and the Downsizing of American Business
1151(1)
Employment Patterns and Labor Organization
1152(1)
The New World Order, Economic Drift, and Gridlock: The Bush Years
1153(9)
The Election of 1988
1153(1)
George Herbert Walker Bush
1154(1)
Holding the Line on the Home Front
1154(1)
Politics and the Conservative Social Agenda
1155(1)
The Clarence Thomas Confirmation Fight
1156(1)
The End of the Cold War
1157(2)
The China Puzzle
1159(1)
Policing the Caribbean
1159(1)
The Gulf War
1160(1)
Desert Storm
1161(1)
The Culture Wars and the Election of 1992
1162(3)
The Challenge of Pluralism, Diversity, and Multiculturalism: The American Salad Bowl
1162(2)
The Election of 1992
1164(1)
Conclusion: American Confidence and the New World Order
1165(2)
The Politics of Equilibrium: The Clinton and Bush Presidencies
1167(28)
The Clinton Presidency: Toward a Centrist Policy
1168(14)
The Residual Influence of the Religious Left
1169(1)
The Clinton Presidency Begins
1169(1)
A Step to the Left
1169(1)
Healthcare Reform
1170(1)
A Continuing National Trauma Over Abortion
1171(1)
Environmentalism
1172(1)
Militant Militias and Radical Discontent
1173(1)
The Economic Boom of the Clinton Years
1173(1)
The Republican Insurgency and the Contract With America
1174(1)
Clinton Occupies the Center
1174(1)
Crime, Drugs, Guns, and Violence
1175(1)
Welfare Reform
1176(1)
The Election of 1996
1176(1)
Farmers Get a New Deal
1177(1)
The Clinton Scandals
1177(2)
The Election of 1998
1179(1)
Soaring Economy, Budget Surpluses, and Post-Scandal Politics
1179(1)
Searching for a Foreign Policy
1180(1)
Peacekeeping and ``Nation Building''
1180(2)
War and Peace in the Middle East
1182(1)
The Clinton Legacy
1182(1)
Peaks and Valleys in the Presidency of George W. Bush
1182(12)
The Election of 2000
1182(2)
George W. Bush Takes the Helm
1184(1)
9/11
1185(1)
The War on Terrorism
1185(2)
The War on Terror Goes Abroad: Afghanistan
1187(1)
Operation Iraqi Freedom
1188(1)
Assessing the Bush Foreign Policy
1189(2)
The Economy
1191(1)
Simmering Domestic Agendas
1191(1)
Republicans Gain Momentum: The Elections of 2002 and 2004
1191(2)
The Bush Record and Persona
1193(1)
A Second Term: Spending His Capital
1193(1)
Conclusion: A Delicate Balance
1194(1)
American Society in the New Millennium: A ``Culture War,'' a Stable Center
1195
The Nation's Changing Makeup
1196(9)
Patterns of Growth and Mobility
1196(3)
Immigration Patterns and Concerns
1199(1)
Persisting Patterns of Poverty
1199(1)
Hope and Alienation for African Americans
1200(2)
Gender Gains and the Gender Gap
1202(1)
Grading Public Education
1202(1)
Focus on Family Values
1203(1)
Sexual Patterns and Sexual Politics
1203(2)
The AIDS Epidemic
1205(1)
Economic Surge and Retreat
1205(3)
The Economic Surge of the 1990s
1206(1)
The International Impact of Multinational Corporations
1207(1)
The Economic Slowdown and Recovery
1207(1)
The Search for Values
1208(7)
Science, Computers, the Internet, and the Future
1208(1)
Literature, the Arts, and Popular Culture
1209(1)
Fitness, Sports, and New Heroes
1210(1)
Values, Habits, and the American Way of Life
1210(1)
Mainstream Protestantism Moves Left
1211(1)
Roman Catholicism Moves Right
1211(2)
The Continuing Acculturation of Old Outsiders
1213(1)
New Religious Outsiders
1213(1)
Resurgent Evangelicalism
1214(1)
Conclusion: Unto a Good Land --- the Enduring American Vision
1215
Appendix 1(1)
Credits 1(1)
Index 1

An electronic version of this book is available through VitalSource.

This book is viewable on PC, Mac, iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch, and most smartphones.

By purchasing, you will be able to view this book online, as well as download it, for the chosen number of days.

A downloadable version of this book is available through the eCampus Reader or compatible Adobe readers.

Applications are available on iOS, Android, PC, Mac, and Windows Mobile platforms.

Please view the compatibility matrix prior to purchase.