Thursday, May 2, 2019

Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition

Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition

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Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition Bank Test , Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition Textbook , Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition PDF , Retracing the Past: Readings in the History of the American People, Volume II (Since 1865), 5th Edition eBook , Gary B. Nash, University of California, Los Angeles Ronald B. Schultz, University of Wyoming

Category : Higher Education

Table of Contents

An * indicates a new selection. Each chapter concludes with “Glossary,” and “Implications.”

Preface.


Acknowledgments.


Introduction: Sources and Interpretations.

PART I.

Chapter 1.

Past Traces: Jourdon Anderson, “To My Old Master” (1865).

Reading: Eric Foner, “African Americans in Public Office During the Era of Reconstruction.”

Chapter 2.

Past Traces: *Lee Chew, “Life of a Chinese Immigrant” (1903).

Reading: Jack Chen, “The Chinese Link a Continent and a Nation.”

Chapter 3.

Past Traces: *Lydia Allen Rudd, “Diary of a Westward Travel” (1852).

Reading: Christine Stansell,“Women on the Great Plains, 1865-1890.”

Chapter 4.

Past Traces: *The Omaha Platform of the People's Party” (1892).

Reading: *Bruce Palmer, “The Southern Populist Critique of American Capitalism.”

Chapter 5.

Past Traces: *Horatio Alger, Jr., “Bound to Rise, Or, Up the Ladder” (1900).

Reading: Carol Nackenoff, “Of Factories and Failures: Exploring the Invisible Factory Gates of Horatio Alger, Jr.”

Chapter 6.

Past Traces: *Red Cloud (1890) and Flying Hawk (1936) on Wounded Knee.

Reading: *Laura Jane Moore, “Lozen: An Apache Woman Warrior.”

PART II.

Chapter 1.

Past Traces: *James T. Rapier, “The Agricultural Labor Force in the South” (1880).

Reading: Jacqueline Jones, “A Bridge of Bent Backs and Laboring Muscles: The Rural South, 1880-1915.”

Chapter 2.

Past Traces: *John Muir, “Mount Ritter” (1911).

Reading: Peter Wild, “John Muir: The Mysteries of Mountains.”

Chapter 3.

Past Traces: *Herbert Croly, “Progressive Democracy” (1914).

Reading: Jeffrey P. Moran, “Modernism Gone Mad: Sex Education Comes to Chicago, 1913.”

Chapter 4.

Past Traces: *Advertisements (1925/1927).

Reading: Mary Murphy, “Messenger of the New Age: Station KGIR in Butte.”

Chapter 5.

Past Traces: *Meridel LeSueur, “The Despair of Unemployed Women” (1932).

Reading: Edward R. Ellis, “What the Depression Did to People.”

Chapter 6.

Past Traces: *A. Philip Randolph, “Why Should We March?” (1942).

Reading: Mark H. Leff,“The Politics of Sacrifice on the Home Front in World War II.”

PART III.

Chapter 1.

Past Traces: *Students for a Democratic Society, Port Huron Statement (1962).

Reading: Nils Kristian Bogen, “Rebels Without a Cause: Toward an Understanding of Anxious Youth in Postwar America.”

Chapter 2.

Past Traces: *Ladies' Home Journal, “The Young Mothers of the 1950s” (1956).

Reading: Lynn Y. Weiner, “Reconstructing Motherhood: The La Leche League in Postwar America.”

Chapter 3.

Past Traces: *Restrictions at Levittown (Late 1940s)

Reading: Kenneth T. Jackson, “The Drive-In Culture of Contemporary America.”

Chapter 4.

Past Traces: *Lyndon B. Johnson, “Commencement Address at Howard University” (1965).

Reading: Allan J. Matusow, “The Vietnam War, the Liberals, and the Overthrow of LBJ.”

Chapter 5.

Past Traces: *Ione Malloy, “Southie Won't Go” (1975).

Reading: *Robin D. G. Kelley, “After Civil Rights: The African American Working and Middle Classes.”

Chapter 6.

Past Traces: *Patricia Morrisroe, “Yuppies-the New Class” (1985).

Reading: *Juliet B. Schor, “The Insidious Cycle of Work and Spend.”

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