Modern America: A Documentary History of the Nation Since 1945: A Documentary History of the Nation Since 1945

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Routledge, 18 de dez. de 2014 - 360 páginas
This primary source reader assembles key documents and firsthand accounts that are emblematic of American life from the end of World War II to the present. Designed to complement a core text for a typical post-1945 U.S. history course, the book offers conciseness and selectivity with balanced coverage of domestic and foreign, societal and cultural issues grouped together chronologically. The readings afford students compelling and sometimes startling insights into the nation's postwar adaptation to its new position of global power and responsibility, wealth, and rapid social change; on through years of energy and ambition, conflict and tragedy, to the post-Vietnam malaise and the rise of Ronald Reagan, the frenzied nineties, and the arrival of the new millennium. Each chapter includes an introduction that sets the documents in historical context, a biographical sketch of a significant person of the time, study questions, and suggestions for further reading.
 

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Conteúdo

Preface
Postwar Political Trends
Origins of the Modern Civil Rights Movement
The Eisenhower Administrations New Look Foreign Policy
The Fifties Lifestyle
The Cold War Heats Up During the Kennedy Administration
Lyndon Johnsons
Sixties Society and Culture
Civil Rights Victories and Divisions
Polarization and Protest
Nixon and the End of U S Involvement in Indochina
The Environmental and Consumer Movements
The Tragedy of Watergate
Feminism and American Society
The Emergence of Ronald Reagan and the New Right
Direitos autorais

Political Trends on the Left and the Right

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Sobre o autor (2014)

Gary Donaldson

Informações bibliográficas