Sources for Forging America Volume Two
A Continental History of the United States
Herausgeber: Viator, Felicia Angeja; Lund, Stefan
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Sources for Forging America Volume Two
A Continental History of the United States
Herausgeber: Viator, Felicia Angeja; Lund, Stefan
- Broschiertes Buch
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press Inc
- Seitenzahl: 224
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 191mm x 236mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 467g
- ISBN-13: 9780197657119
- ISBN-10: 0197657117
- Artikelnr.: 68273304
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Felicia Angeja Viator is Associate Professor of History at San Francisco State University. Stefan Lund is a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Virginia.
* How to Read a Primary Source
* Chapter 15. Ending the War and (Re)Constructing the Nation, 1863-1865
* 15.1 Abraham Lincoln, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(1863)
* 15.2 Nancy Johnson, Testimony by a Georgia Freedwoman about How Union
Troops Stole Her Property (1873)
* 15.3 Excerpt from the Virginia Black Codes (1866)
* 15.4 Visual Source: Battleground Ruins in Charleston, SC (c.
1860-1865)
* 15.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Pardon and Franchise (1865)
* Chapter 16. The Promise and Limits of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
* 16.1 Thaddeus Stevens, Speech to Congress (1867)
* 16.2 Testimony of Mervin Givens to Congress about Ku Klux Klan
Activity in South Carolina (1871)
* 16.3 Visual Source: Distinguished Members, Reconstructed Constitution
of Louisiana (1868)
* 16.4 Visual Source: Philadelphia Mayoral Election Poster on Racial
Segregation on Public Transit (1868)
* 16.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Uncle Sam's Thanksgiving Dinner
(1869)
* Chapter 17. Capitalism Takes Hold, 1873-1890
* 17.1 Walt Whitman, "To A Locomotive in Winter" (1876)
* 17.2 Mrs. Spotted Horn Bull, Testimony on the Battle of the Greasy
Grass (Little Bighorn) (n.d.)
* 17.3 Frank Lloyd Wright, On Seeing His First American City (1887)
* 17.4 Visual Source: William Holbrook Beard, The Bulls and Bears in
the Market, Wall Street (1879)
* 17.5 Visual Source: Solomon D. Butcher, Shores Family near
Westerville, Custer County, NE (1887)
* 17.6 Visual Source: The Destruction of the Buffalo (c. 1892)
* Chapter 18. Caldrons of Protest, 1886-1896
* 18.1 Bob Hart, "The Eight-hour System" (n.d.)
* 18.2 Colored Farmers' Alliance on Violence against Black Farmers
(1889)
* 18.3 Lucy Parsons, Speech to the Industrial Workers of the World
(1905)
* 18.4 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Difficult Problems Solving
Themselves (1879)
* 18.5 Visual Source: The Anarchist-labor Troubles in Chicago (1886)
* Chapter 19. A Second Reconstruction, 1890-1914
* 19.1 Upton Sinclair, Excerpts from The Jungle (1906)
* 19.2 Margaret Sanger, Excerpts from What Every Girl Should Know
(1916)
* 19.3 Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Address at the First National
Conference of Black Women's Clubs (1895)
* 19.4 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, Out in the Cold (1884)
* 19.5 Visual Source: Ad for Horsford's Acid Phosphate Brain Tonic for
"Nervousness" (1888)
* 19.6 Visual Source: Rand McNally and Company, Bird's Eye View of the
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1893)
* Chapter 20. A New Empire at Home and Abroad, 1890-1914
* 20.1 Citizens' Committee on the Annexation of Hawaii, "Memorial to
the President, the Congress, and the People of the United States of
America" (1897)
* 20.2 Frederick Douglass, Letter to Ida B. Wells (1892)
* 20.3 Simon Pokagon, "The Red Man's Greeting" (1893)
* 20.4 Enrique Dupuy de Lôme, Letter to José Canalejas (1898)
* 20.5 Platt Amendment (1903)
* 20.6 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, I Rather Like That Imported
Affair (1904)
* 20.7 Visual Source: Leaders of the Philippine Revolution (c. 1898)
* Chapter 21. War, Revolution, and Reaction, 1910-1925
* 21.1 Woodrow Wilson, "Fourteen Points" (1918)
* 21.2 Alan Seegar, "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" (1919)
* 21.3 Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin), "Editorial Comment" (1919)
* 21.4 Visual Source: 302nd and 92nd Regiments in Action in France
(1918)
* 21.5 Visual Source: Ku Klux Klan Parade, Washington, DC (1926)
* Chapter 22. Looking Into the Abyss, 1920-1934
* 22.1 Elliott Bell, "Crash" (1939)
* 22.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Banking Crisis Fireside Chat (1933)
* 22.3 "Defensa de los Norteños" (n.d.)
* 22.4 The Carter Family, "No Depression in Heaven" (1936)
* 22.5 Visual Source: Dorothea Lange, Family Who Traveled by Freight
Train (1939)
* Chapter 23. Birth Pangs of Social Democracy, 1933-1940
* 23.1 Caroline Henderson, Letter to a Friend in Maryland "from the
Dust Bowl" (1935)
* 23.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square
Garden (1936)
* 23.3 Visual Source: Peter Stackpole, Bay Bridge Workers at Quitting
Time (1935)
* 23.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Front of Spanish Language Movie
Theater, San Antonio, TX (1939)
* 23.5 Visual Source: Boris Deutsch, Cultural Contributions of North,
South and Central America (1939-1944)
* Chapter 24. Flames of Global War, Visions of Global Peace, 1940-1945
* 24.1 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Annual Message to Congress and "Four
Freedoms" (1941)
* 24.2 A. Philip Randolph, Program of the March on Washington Movement
(1941)
* 24.3 Janet Matsuda, "Hope Out of Gloom" (1944/45)
* 24.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Child Waiting at Los Angeles
Evacuation Center (1942)
* 24.5 Visual Source: This Man Is Your Friend: Chinese--He Fights for
Freedom (1942)
* Chapter 25. Cold-War America, 1945-1957
* 25.1 Senate Resolution 301: Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy (1954)
* 25.2 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Statement of
Purpose (1960, revised 1962)
* 25.3 US Government Amicus Curiae Brief for Brown v. Board of
Education (1952)
* 25.4 Visual Source: Linda Christian as "Anatomic Bomb" (1945)
* 25.5 Visual Source: U.S. Steel's "Bride's House" Advertisement (1956)
* Chapter 26. Rebellion on the Left, Resurgence on the Right, 1957-1968
* 26.1 John Lewis, "Wake Up America" (1963)
* 26.2 Barry Goldwater, Speech to Congress Explaining Vote against 1964
Civil Rights Act (1964)
* 26.3 Lyndon B. Johnson, Special Message to Congress (1965)
* 26.4 Paul Potter, On the Vietnam War (1965)
* 26.5 Visual Source: Police Arresting Black Men During the Watts
Uprising, Los Angeles (1965)
* Chapter 27. Destabilizations, 1968-1979
* 27.1 Black Panther Party for Self Defense, "Ten-Point Program" (1966)
* 27.2 Third World Gay Revolution, "Sixteen Point Platform and Program"
(1970)
* 27.3 Young Lords Party, "Thirteen Points Program and Platform" (1969)
* 27.4 Visual Source: Cover of Ms. Magazine (1972)
* 27.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Hostage (1979)
* Chapter 28. New Conservatism and Its Discontents, 1980-1989
* 28.1 Ronald Reagan, Campaign Speech at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco (1966)
* 28.2 Phyllis Schlafly, "What's Wrong With 'Equal Rights' for Women?"
(1972)
* 28.3 Jerry Falwell, "The Five Major Problems Moral Americans Need to
Be Ready to Face" (1980)
* 28.4 National Security Council, Directive No. 75 on US Relations with
the USSR (1983)
* 28.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick
(1986)
* Chapter 29. After the Wall Fell: America and the Twenty-First
Century, 1989-2004
* 29.1 George H. W. Bush, "New World Order" Address before Congress
(1990)
* 29.2 George W. Bush, "War on Terror" Address before Congress (2001)
* 29.3 Moustafa Bayoumi, Excerpts from "How Does It Feel to Be a
Problem?" (2001)
* 29.4 NAACP on Voter Irregularities in Florida (2000)
* 29.5 Visual Source: Ann Telnaes, The Bush Decision (2000)
* Chapter 30. Destinies, 2005-present
* 30.1 Ta-Nehisi Coates, Excerpt from "Fear of a Black President"
(2012)
* 30.2 Greta Thunberg, Speech at the UN Climate Action Summit (2019)
* 30.3 Nicholas Fandos and Emily Cochrane, "After Pro-Trump Mob Storms
Capitol, Congress Confirms Biden's Win" (2021)
* 30.4 Visual Source: Michael Williamson, Rainbow White House after Gay
Marriage Supreme Court Decision (2015)
* 30.5 Visual Source: Dave Granlund, March Madness (2016)
* Chapter 15. Ending the War and (Re)Constructing the Nation, 1863-1865
* 15.1 Abraham Lincoln, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(1863)
* 15.2 Nancy Johnson, Testimony by a Georgia Freedwoman about How Union
Troops Stole Her Property (1873)
* 15.3 Excerpt from the Virginia Black Codes (1866)
* 15.4 Visual Source: Battleground Ruins in Charleston, SC (c.
1860-1865)
* 15.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Pardon and Franchise (1865)
* Chapter 16. The Promise and Limits of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
* 16.1 Thaddeus Stevens, Speech to Congress (1867)
* 16.2 Testimony of Mervin Givens to Congress about Ku Klux Klan
Activity in South Carolina (1871)
* 16.3 Visual Source: Distinguished Members, Reconstructed Constitution
of Louisiana (1868)
* 16.4 Visual Source: Philadelphia Mayoral Election Poster on Racial
Segregation on Public Transit (1868)
* 16.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Uncle Sam's Thanksgiving Dinner
(1869)
* Chapter 17. Capitalism Takes Hold, 1873-1890
* 17.1 Walt Whitman, "To A Locomotive in Winter" (1876)
* 17.2 Mrs. Spotted Horn Bull, Testimony on the Battle of the Greasy
Grass (Little Bighorn) (n.d.)
* 17.3 Frank Lloyd Wright, On Seeing His First American City (1887)
* 17.4 Visual Source: William Holbrook Beard, The Bulls and Bears in
the Market, Wall Street (1879)
* 17.5 Visual Source: Solomon D. Butcher, Shores Family near
Westerville, Custer County, NE (1887)
* 17.6 Visual Source: The Destruction of the Buffalo (c. 1892)
* Chapter 18. Caldrons of Protest, 1886-1896
* 18.1 Bob Hart, "The Eight-hour System" (n.d.)
* 18.2 Colored Farmers' Alliance on Violence against Black Farmers
(1889)
* 18.3 Lucy Parsons, Speech to the Industrial Workers of the World
(1905)
* 18.4 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Difficult Problems Solving
Themselves (1879)
* 18.5 Visual Source: The Anarchist-labor Troubles in Chicago (1886)
* Chapter 19. A Second Reconstruction, 1890-1914
* 19.1 Upton Sinclair, Excerpts from The Jungle (1906)
* 19.2 Margaret Sanger, Excerpts from What Every Girl Should Know
(1916)
* 19.3 Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Address at the First National
Conference of Black Women's Clubs (1895)
* 19.4 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, Out in the Cold (1884)
* 19.5 Visual Source: Ad for Horsford's Acid Phosphate Brain Tonic for
"Nervousness" (1888)
* 19.6 Visual Source: Rand McNally and Company, Bird's Eye View of the
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1893)
* Chapter 20. A New Empire at Home and Abroad, 1890-1914
* 20.1 Citizens' Committee on the Annexation of Hawaii, "Memorial to
the President, the Congress, and the People of the United States of
America" (1897)
* 20.2 Frederick Douglass, Letter to Ida B. Wells (1892)
* 20.3 Simon Pokagon, "The Red Man's Greeting" (1893)
* 20.4 Enrique Dupuy de Lôme, Letter to José Canalejas (1898)
* 20.5 Platt Amendment (1903)
* 20.6 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, I Rather Like That Imported
Affair (1904)
* 20.7 Visual Source: Leaders of the Philippine Revolution (c. 1898)
* Chapter 21. War, Revolution, and Reaction, 1910-1925
* 21.1 Woodrow Wilson, "Fourteen Points" (1918)
* 21.2 Alan Seegar, "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" (1919)
* 21.3 Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin), "Editorial Comment" (1919)
* 21.4 Visual Source: 302nd and 92nd Regiments in Action in France
(1918)
* 21.5 Visual Source: Ku Klux Klan Parade, Washington, DC (1926)
* Chapter 22. Looking Into the Abyss, 1920-1934
* 22.1 Elliott Bell, "Crash" (1939)
* 22.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Banking Crisis Fireside Chat (1933)
* 22.3 "Defensa de los Norteños" (n.d.)
* 22.4 The Carter Family, "No Depression in Heaven" (1936)
* 22.5 Visual Source: Dorothea Lange, Family Who Traveled by Freight
Train (1939)
* Chapter 23. Birth Pangs of Social Democracy, 1933-1940
* 23.1 Caroline Henderson, Letter to a Friend in Maryland "from the
Dust Bowl" (1935)
* 23.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square
Garden (1936)
* 23.3 Visual Source: Peter Stackpole, Bay Bridge Workers at Quitting
Time (1935)
* 23.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Front of Spanish Language Movie
Theater, San Antonio, TX (1939)
* 23.5 Visual Source: Boris Deutsch, Cultural Contributions of North,
South and Central America (1939-1944)
* Chapter 24. Flames of Global War, Visions of Global Peace, 1940-1945
* 24.1 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Annual Message to Congress and "Four
Freedoms" (1941)
* 24.2 A. Philip Randolph, Program of the March on Washington Movement
(1941)
* 24.3 Janet Matsuda, "Hope Out of Gloom" (1944/45)
* 24.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Child Waiting at Los Angeles
Evacuation Center (1942)
* 24.5 Visual Source: This Man Is Your Friend: Chinese--He Fights for
Freedom (1942)
* Chapter 25. Cold-War America, 1945-1957
* 25.1 Senate Resolution 301: Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy (1954)
* 25.2 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Statement of
Purpose (1960, revised 1962)
* 25.3 US Government Amicus Curiae Brief for Brown v. Board of
Education (1952)
* 25.4 Visual Source: Linda Christian as "Anatomic Bomb" (1945)
* 25.5 Visual Source: U.S. Steel's "Bride's House" Advertisement (1956)
* Chapter 26. Rebellion on the Left, Resurgence on the Right, 1957-1968
* 26.1 John Lewis, "Wake Up America" (1963)
* 26.2 Barry Goldwater, Speech to Congress Explaining Vote against 1964
Civil Rights Act (1964)
* 26.3 Lyndon B. Johnson, Special Message to Congress (1965)
* 26.4 Paul Potter, On the Vietnam War (1965)
* 26.5 Visual Source: Police Arresting Black Men During the Watts
Uprising, Los Angeles (1965)
* Chapter 27. Destabilizations, 1968-1979
* 27.1 Black Panther Party for Self Defense, "Ten-Point Program" (1966)
* 27.2 Third World Gay Revolution, "Sixteen Point Platform and Program"
(1970)
* 27.3 Young Lords Party, "Thirteen Points Program and Platform" (1969)
* 27.4 Visual Source: Cover of Ms. Magazine (1972)
* 27.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Hostage (1979)
* Chapter 28. New Conservatism and Its Discontents, 1980-1989
* 28.1 Ronald Reagan, Campaign Speech at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco (1966)
* 28.2 Phyllis Schlafly, "What's Wrong With 'Equal Rights' for Women?"
(1972)
* 28.3 Jerry Falwell, "The Five Major Problems Moral Americans Need to
Be Ready to Face" (1980)
* 28.4 National Security Council, Directive No. 75 on US Relations with
the USSR (1983)
* 28.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick
(1986)
* Chapter 29. After the Wall Fell: America and the Twenty-First
Century, 1989-2004
* 29.1 George H. W. Bush, "New World Order" Address before Congress
(1990)
* 29.2 George W. Bush, "War on Terror" Address before Congress (2001)
* 29.3 Moustafa Bayoumi, Excerpts from "How Does It Feel to Be a
Problem?" (2001)
* 29.4 NAACP on Voter Irregularities in Florida (2000)
* 29.5 Visual Source: Ann Telnaes, The Bush Decision (2000)
* Chapter 30. Destinies, 2005-present
* 30.1 Ta-Nehisi Coates, Excerpt from "Fear of a Black President"
(2012)
* 30.2 Greta Thunberg, Speech at the UN Climate Action Summit (2019)
* 30.3 Nicholas Fandos and Emily Cochrane, "After Pro-Trump Mob Storms
Capitol, Congress Confirms Biden's Win" (2021)
* 30.4 Visual Source: Michael Williamson, Rainbow White House after Gay
Marriage Supreme Court Decision (2015)
* 30.5 Visual Source: Dave Granlund, March Madness (2016)
* How to Read a Primary Source
* Chapter 15. Ending the War and (Re)Constructing the Nation, 1863-1865
* 15.1 Abraham Lincoln, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(1863)
* 15.2 Nancy Johnson, Testimony by a Georgia Freedwoman about How Union
Troops Stole Her Property (1873)
* 15.3 Excerpt from the Virginia Black Codes (1866)
* 15.4 Visual Source: Battleground Ruins in Charleston, SC (c.
1860-1865)
* 15.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Pardon and Franchise (1865)
* Chapter 16. The Promise and Limits of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
* 16.1 Thaddeus Stevens, Speech to Congress (1867)
* 16.2 Testimony of Mervin Givens to Congress about Ku Klux Klan
Activity in South Carolina (1871)
* 16.3 Visual Source: Distinguished Members, Reconstructed Constitution
of Louisiana (1868)
* 16.4 Visual Source: Philadelphia Mayoral Election Poster on Racial
Segregation on Public Transit (1868)
* 16.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Uncle Sam's Thanksgiving Dinner
(1869)
* Chapter 17. Capitalism Takes Hold, 1873-1890
* 17.1 Walt Whitman, "To A Locomotive in Winter" (1876)
* 17.2 Mrs. Spotted Horn Bull, Testimony on the Battle of the Greasy
Grass (Little Bighorn) (n.d.)
* 17.3 Frank Lloyd Wright, On Seeing His First American City (1887)
* 17.4 Visual Source: William Holbrook Beard, The Bulls and Bears in
the Market, Wall Street (1879)
* 17.5 Visual Source: Solomon D. Butcher, Shores Family near
Westerville, Custer County, NE (1887)
* 17.6 Visual Source: The Destruction of the Buffalo (c. 1892)
* Chapter 18. Caldrons of Protest, 1886-1896
* 18.1 Bob Hart, "The Eight-hour System" (n.d.)
* 18.2 Colored Farmers' Alliance on Violence against Black Farmers
(1889)
* 18.3 Lucy Parsons, Speech to the Industrial Workers of the World
(1905)
* 18.4 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Difficult Problems Solving
Themselves (1879)
* 18.5 Visual Source: The Anarchist-labor Troubles in Chicago (1886)
* Chapter 19. A Second Reconstruction, 1890-1914
* 19.1 Upton Sinclair, Excerpts from The Jungle (1906)
* 19.2 Margaret Sanger, Excerpts from What Every Girl Should Know
(1916)
* 19.3 Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Address at the First National
Conference of Black Women's Clubs (1895)
* 19.4 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, Out in the Cold (1884)
* 19.5 Visual Source: Ad for Horsford's Acid Phosphate Brain Tonic for
"Nervousness" (1888)
* 19.6 Visual Source: Rand McNally and Company, Bird's Eye View of the
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1893)
* Chapter 20. A New Empire at Home and Abroad, 1890-1914
* 20.1 Citizens' Committee on the Annexation of Hawaii, "Memorial to
the President, the Congress, and the People of the United States of
America" (1897)
* 20.2 Frederick Douglass, Letter to Ida B. Wells (1892)
* 20.3 Simon Pokagon, "The Red Man's Greeting" (1893)
* 20.4 Enrique Dupuy de Lôme, Letter to José Canalejas (1898)
* 20.5 Platt Amendment (1903)
* 20.6 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, I Rather Like That Imported
Affair (1904)
* 20.7 Visual Source: Leaders of the Philippine Revolution (c. 1898)
* Chapter 21. War, Revolution, and Reaction, 1910-1925
* 21.1 Woodrow Wilson, "Fourteen Points" (1918)
* 21.2 Alan Seegar, "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" (1919)
* 21.3 Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin), "Editorial Comment" (1919)
* 21.4 Visual Source: 302nd and 92nd Regiments in Action in France
(1918)
* 21.5 Visual Source: Ku Klux Klan Parade, Washington, DC (1926)
* Chapter 22. Looking Into the Abyss, 1920-1934
* 22.1 Elliott Bell, "Crash" (1939)
* 22.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Banking Crisis Fireside Chat (1933)
* 22.3 "Defensa de los Norteños" (n.d.)
* 22.4 The Carter Family, "No Depression in Heaven" (1936)
* 22.5 Visual Source: Dorothea Lange, Family Who Traveled by Freight
Train (1939)
* Chapter 23. Birth Pangs of Social Democracy, 1933-1940
* 23.1 Caroline Henderson, Letter to a Friend in Maryland "from the
Dust Bowl" (1935)
* 23.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square
Garden (1936)
* 23.3 Visual Source: Peter Stackpole, Bay Bridge Workers at Quitting
Time (1935)
* 23.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Front of Spanish Language Movie
Theater, San Antonio, TX (1939)
* 23.5 Visual Source: Boris Deutsch, Cultural Contributions of North,
South and Central America (1939-1944)
* Chapter 24. Flames of Global War, Visions of Global Peace, 1940-1945
* 24.1 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Annual Message to Congress and "Four
Freedoms" (1941)
* 24.2 A. Philip Randolph, Program of the March on Washington Movement
(1941)
* 24.3 Janet Matsuda, "Hope Out of Gloom" (1944/45)
* 24.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Child Waiting at Los Angeles
Evacuation Center (1942)
* 24.5 Visual Source: This Man Is Your Friend: Chinese--He Fights for
Freedom (1942)
* Chapter 25. Cold-War America, 1945-1957
* 25.1 Senate Resolution 301: Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy (1954)
* 25.2 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Statement of
Purpose (1960, revised 1962)
* 25.3 US Government Amicus Curiae Brief for Brown v. Board of
Education (1952)
* 25.4 Visual Source: Linda Christian as "Anatomic Bomb" (1945)
* 25.5 Visual Source: U.S. Steel's "Bride's House" Advertisement (1956)
* Chapter 26. Rebellion on the Left, Resurgence on the Right, 1957-1968
* 26.1 John Lewis, "Wake Up America" (1963)
* 26.2 Barry Goldwater, Speech to Congress Explaining Vote against 1964
Civil Rights Act (1964)
* 26.3 Lyndon B. Johnson, Special Message to Congress (1965)
* 26.4 Paul Potter, On the Vietnam War (1965)
* 26.5 Visual Source: Police Arresting Black Men During the Watts
Uprising, Los Angeles (1965)
* Chapter 27. Destabilizations, 1968-1979
* 27.1 Black Panther Party for Self Defense, "Ten-Point Program" (1966)
* 27.2 Third World Gay Revolution, "Sixteen Point Platform and Program"
(1970)
* 27.3 Young Lords Party, "Thirteen Points Program and Platform" (1969)
* 27.4 Visual Source: Cover of Ms. Magazine (1972)
* 27.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Hostage (1979)
* Chapter 28. New Conservatism and Its Discontents, 1980-1989
* 28.1 Ronald Reagan, Campaign Speech at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco (1966)
* 28.2 Phyllis Schlafly, "What's Wrong With 'Equal Rights' for Women?"
(1972)
* 28.3 Jerry Falwell, "The Five Major Problems Moral Americans Need to
Be Ready to Face" (1980)
* 28.4 National Security Council, Directive No. 75 on US Relations with
the USSR (1983)
* 28.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick
(1986)
* Chapter 29. After the Wall Fell: America and the Twenty-First
Century, 1989-2004
* 29.1 George H. W. Bush, "New World Order" Address before Congress
(1990)
* 29.2 George W. Bush, "War on Terror" Address before Congress (2001)
* 29.3 Moustafa Bayoumi, Excerpts from "How Does It Feel to Be a
Problem?" (2001)
* 29.4 NAACP on Voter Irregularities in Florida (2000)
* 29.5 Visual Source: Ann Telnaes, The Bush Decision (2000)
* Chapter 30. Destinies, 2005-present
* 30.1 Ta-Nehisi Coates, Excerpt from "Fear of a Black President"
(2012)
* 30.2 Greta Thunberg, Speech at the UN Climate Action Summit (2019)
* 30.3 Nicholas Fandos and Emily Cochrane, "After Pro-Trump Mob Storms
Capitol, Congress Confirms Biden's Win" (2021)
* 30.4 Visual Source: Michael Williamson, Rainbow White House after Gay
Marriage Supreme Court Decision (2015)
* 30.5 Visual Source: Dave Granlund, March Madness (2016)
* Chapter 15. Ending the War and (Re)Constructing the Nation, 1863-1865
* 15.1 Abraham Lincoln, Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction
(1863)
* 15.2 Nancy Johnson, Testimony by a Georgia Freedwoman about How Union
Troops Stole Her Property (1873)
* 15.3 Excerpt from the Virginia Black Codes (1866)
* 15.4 Visual Source: Battleground Ruins in Charleston, SC (c.
1860-1865)
* 15.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Pardon and Franchise (1865)
* Chapter 16. The Promise and Limits of Reconstruction, 1865-1877
* 16.1 Thaddeus Stevens, Speech to Congress (1867)
* 16.2 Testimony of Mervin Givens to Congress about Ku Klux Klan
Activity in South Carolina (1871)
* 16.3 Visual Source: Distinguished Members, Reconstructed Constitution
of Louisiana (1868)
* 16.4 Visual Source: Philadelphia Mayoral Election Poster on Racial
Segregation on Public Transit (1868)
* 16.5 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Uncle Sam's Thanksgiving Dinner
(1869)
* Chapter 17. Capitalism Takes Hold, 1873-1890
* 17.1 Walt Whitman, "To A Locomotive in Winter" (1876)
* 17.2 Mrs. Spotted Horn Bull, Testimony on the Battle of the Greasy
Grass (Little Bighorn) (n.d.)
* 17.3 Frank Lloyd Wright, On Seeing His First American City (1887)
* 17.4 Visual Source: William Holbrook Beard, The Bulls and Bears in
the Market, Wall Street (1879)
* 17.5 Visual Source: Solomon D. Butcher, Shores Family near
Westerville, Custer County, NE (1887)
* 17.6 Visual Source: The Destruction of the Buffalo (c. 1892)
* Chapter 18. Caldrons of Protest, 1886-1896
* 18.1 Bob Hart, "The Eight-hour System" (n.d.)
* 18.2 Colored Farmers' Alliance on Violence against Black Farmers
(1889)
* 18.3 Lucy Parsons, Speech to the Industrial Workers of the World
(1905)
* 18.4 Visual Source: Thomas Nast, Difficult Problems Solving
Themselves (1879)
* 18.5 Visual Source: The Anarchist-labor Troubles in Chicago (1886)
* Chapter 19. A Second Reconstruction, 1890-1914
* 19.1 Upton Sinclair, Excerpts from The Jungle (1906)
* 19.2 Margaret Sanger, Excerpts from What Every Girl Should Know
(1916)
* 19.3 Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Address at the First National
Conference of Black Women's Clubs (1895)
* 19.4 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, Out in the Cold (1884)
* 19.5 Visual Source: Ad for Horsford's Acid Phosphate Brain Tonic for
"Nervousness" (1888)
* 19.6 Visual Source: Rand McNally and Company, Bird's Eye View of the
World's Columbian Exposition, Chicago (1893)
* Chapter 20. A New Empire at Home and Abroad, 1890-1914
* 20.1 Citizens' Committee on the Annexation of Hawaii, "Memorial to
the President, the Congress, and the People of the United States of
America" (1897)
* 20.2 Frederick Douglass, Letter to Ida B. Wells (1892)
* 20.3 Simon Pokagon, "The Red Man's Greeting" (1893)
* 20.4 Enrique Dupuy de Lôme, Letter to José Canalejas (1898)
* 20.5 Platt Amendment (1903)
* 20.6 Visual Source: Grant E. Hamilton, I Rather Like That Imported
Affair (1904)
* 20.7 Visual Source: Leaders of the Philippine Revolution (c. 1898)
* Chapter 21. War, Revolution, and Reaction, 1910-1925
* 21.1 Woodrow Wilson, "Fourteen Points" (1918)
* 21.2 Alan Seegar, "I Have a Rendezvous with Death" (1919)
* 21.3 Zitkala-Sa (Gertrude Simmons Bonnin), "Editorial Comment" (1919)
* 21.4 Visual Source: 302nd and 92nd Regiments in Action in France
(1918)
* 21.5 Visual Source: Ku Klux Klan Parade, Washington, DC (1926)
* Chapter 22. Looking Into the Abyss, 1920-1934
* 22.1 Elliott Bell, "Crash" (1939)
* 22.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Banking Crisis Fireside Chat (1933)
* 22.3 "Defensa de los Norteños" (n.d.)
* 22.4 The Carter Family, "No Depression in Heaven" (1936)
* 22.5 Visual Source: Dorothea Lange, Family Who Traveled by Freight
Train (1939)
* Chapter 23. Birth Pangs of Social Democracy, 1933-1940
* 23.1 Caroline Henderson, Letter to a Friend in Maryland "from the
Dust Bowl" (1935)
* 23.2 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Campaign Address at Madison Square
Garden (1936)
* 23.3 Visual Source: Peter Stackpole, Bay Bridge Workers at Quitting
Time (1935)
* 23.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Front of Spanish Language Movie
Theater, San Antonio, TX (1939)
* 23.5 Visual Source: Boris Deutsch, Cultural Contributions of North,
South and Central America (1939-1944)
* Chapter 24. Flames of Global War, Visions of Global Peace, 1940-1945
* 24.1 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Annual Message to Congress and "Four
Freedoms" (1941)
* 24.2 A. Philip Randolph, Program of the March on Washington Movement
(1941)
* 24.3 Janet Matsuda, "Hope Out of Gloom" (1944/45)
* 24.4 Visual Source: Russell Lee, Child Waiting at Los Angeles
Evacuation Center (1942)
* 24.5 Visual Source: This Man Is Your Friend: Chinese--He Fights for
Freedom (1942)
* Chapter 25. Cold-War America, 1945-1957
* 25.1 Senate Resolution 301: Censure of Senator Joseph McCarthy (1954)
* 25.2 Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), Statement of
Purpose (1960, revised 1962)
* 25.3 US Government Amicus Curiae Brief for Brown v. Board of
Education (1952)
* 25.4 Visual Source: Linda Christian as "Anatomic Bomb" (1945)
* 25.5 Visual Source: U.S. Steel's "Bride's House" Advertisement (1956)
* Chapter 26. Rebellion on the Left, Resurgence on the Right, 1957-1968
* 26.1 John Lewis, "Wake Up America" (1963)
* 26.2 Barry Goldwater, Speech to Congress Explaining Vote against 1964
Civil Rights Act (1964)
* 26.3 Lyndon B. Johnson, Special Message to Congress (1965)
* 26.4 Paul Potter, On the Vietnam War (1965)
* 26.5 Visual Source: Police Arresting Black Men During the Watts
Uprising, Los Angeles (1965)
* Chapter 27. Destabilizations, 1968-1979
* 27.1 Black Panther Party for Self Defense, "Ten-Point Program" (1966)
* 27.2 Third World Gay Revolution, "Sixteen Point Platform and Program"
(1970)
* 27.3 Young Lords Party, "Thirteen Points Program and Platform" (1969)
* 27.4 Visual Source: Cover of Ms. Magazine (1972)
* 27.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Hostage (1979)
* Chapter 28. New Conservatism and Its Discontents, 1980-1989
* 28.1 Ronald Reagan, Campaign Speech at the Cow Palace in San
Francisco (1966)
* 28.2 Phyllis Schlafly, "What's Wrong With 'Equal Rights' for Women?"
(1972)
* 28.3 Jerry Falwell, "The Five Major Problems Moral Americans Need to
Be Ready to Face" (1980)
* 28.4 National Security Council, Directive No. 75 on US Relations with
the USSR (1983)
* 28.5 Visual Source: Herblock, Speak Softly and Carry a Big Stick
(1986)
* Chapter 29. After the Wall Fell: America and the Twenty-First
Century, 1989-2004
* 29.1 George H. W. Bush, "New World Order" Address before Congress
(1990)
* 29.2 George W. Bush, "War on Terror" Address before Congress (2001)
* 29.3 Moustafa Bayoumi, Excerpts from "How Does It Feel to Be a
Problem?" (2001)
* 29.4 NAACP on Voter Irregularities in Florida (2000)
* 29.5 Visual Source: Ann Telnaes, The Bush Decision (2000)
* Chapter 30. Destinies, 2005-present
* 30.1 Ta-Nehisi Coates, Excerpt from "Fear of a Black President"
(2012)
* 30.2 Greta Thunberg, Speech at the UN Climate Action Summit (2019)
* 30.3 Nicholas Fandos and Emily Cochrane, "After Pro-Trump Mob Storms
Capitol, Congress Confirms Biden's Win" (2021)
* 30.4 Visual Source: Michael Williamson, Rainbow White House after Gay
Marriage Supreme Court Decision (2015)
* 30.5 Visual Source: Dave Granlund, March Madness (2016)