General Historiography

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "General Historiography"

Transcription

1 General Historiography in U.S. History James L. Smith

2 Historiography A study of changing historical interpretations, shifting emphasis, and different methodologies. History is a conversation between the past and the present. Historians ask questions about the past. Historical questions reflect the time and circumstances of the historian. Our understanding of the past is often nothing more than a product of our own moment in history. Something from the past that has little to do with the world in which we live may not even make it into our history books. History is a dynamic, ever changing, and often contentious subject. Two historians looking at the same information may arrive at different interpretations of the past. Each generation rewrites history. History is in a constant state of revision. Domestic Affairs in U.S. History Four Schools of Historical Thought Progressive History Consensus History New Left History Social History! Foreign Affairs in U.S. History Three Schools of Historical Thought Nationalist History Realist History Radical History 1

3 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS Progressive History Time Period: Early twentieth century through the end of World War II Charles Beard, An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States Arthur Schlesinger, Sr., The Age of Jackson 1. U.S. history is characterized by a struggle between the power elite and the people. 2. Liberals and progressives have been moving the nation closer to a liberal democratic state. The development of a liberal democratic state is inevitable. 3. Private property and free enterprise are the best way to provide opportunities for common Americans. Private property should be protected. 4. Conflict has shaped U.S. history. The following conflicts represent Americaʼs polarized history: a. rich vs. poor b. aristocracy vs. democracy c. debtors vs. creditors d. North vs. South e. East vs. West f. labor vs. big business g. Jefferson vs. Hamilton h. liberals vs. conservatives i. agrarianism vs. capitalism 5. Note: Progressive historians generally ignored issues of race, gender, and ethnicity. 2

4 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS Consensus History Time Period: The late 1940's through the 1980's Richard Hofstadter, The Age of Reform Louis Hartz, The Liberal Tradition in America Daniel Boorstin, The Americans 1. The shared ideas of Americans are more important than the conflicts. U.S. history is generally lacking in conflict, particularly class conflict. Conflicts may be present in U.S. history, but they never approach the same level of intensity as the conflicts that characterize European history. 2. U.S. history is characterized by an ideological narrowness and a general agreement on fundamental principles. Values such as freedom of religion and freedom of speech are shared by most Americans. Americans have exhibited a much narrower range of divisive issues and conflicts than people in other parts of the world. Political struggles in the United States usually take place close to the center of the political spectrum rather than between left and right wing extremists. 3. Historians should focus on ideas that cross over time periods. Historians should work to uncover and describe the common beliefs and shared experiences of Americans. 4. The accomplishments and achievements of American democratic capitalism should be celebrated. Americans have always been held together by a general prosperity. 3

5 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS New Left History Time Period: The 1960's through the 1980's. Michael Harrington, The Other America Howard Zinn, A Peopleʼs History of the United States 1. Historians should include stories of the violence, racism, and oppression in American society. 2. The United States is a stew of race, class, gender, and ethnicity. The image of an American consensus is inaccurate. 3. United States history should celebrate the individualists, radicals, and anarchists of the past. People such as William Lloyd Garrison, Eugene Debs, and W.E.B. DuBois were ahead of their times in describing injustices in the United States. 4

6 DOMESTIC AFFAIRS Social History Time Period: 1980's to the present. Eric Foner, Reconstruction: Americaʼs Unfinished Revolution, Patricia Limerick, Legacy of Conquest 1. Historians should focus on common people rather than individuals in a perceived position of power or influence. Historians should study diaries, letters, and other documents from common people. History should be studied from the bottom up. 2. U.S. history is characterized by conflict that, in general, is neither political nor economic. The conflict shaping United States history is primarily cultural conflict. a. Americans struggle against each other with opposing views of how to live. b. Americans struggle against each other with opposing views of modernism vs. traditionalism or change vs. continuity. 3. Historians should use comparative history to understand the United States better. Historians should compare American society to societies in other nations and put U.S. history in a global perspective. 5

7 DIPLOMATIC HISTORY The Nationalists Samuel Flagg Bemis, A Diplomatic History of the United States Thomas Bailey, A Diplomatic History of the American People Bradford Perkins, Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations Larry Schweikart and Michael Patrick Allen, A Patriotʼs History of the United States 1. United States foreign policy is characterized by a commitment to high ideals. U.S. foreign policy combines a realistic concept of self-interest with a generous support of the goals of democracy, self-determination, and economic prosperity within other nations. 2. The Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution have inspired people throughout the world. American foreign policy is characterized by an unselfish idealism that is unequaled in the history of the world. 3. The United States may have been an imperialist power, but it has been a good imperialist power, prepared from the beginning of any imperialist action for the eventual abandonment of American control. 4. The United States has made a few mistakes in foreign policy, such as taking the Philippines and keeping it as a colony. However, the U.S. made amends by generously preparing the Philippines for independence and economic stability by building roads, bridges, schools, etc. 6

8 DIPLOMATIC HISTORY The Realists George Kennan, American Diplomacy Hans Morganthau, Vietnam and the United States 1. Foreign policy should not be a matter of public debate. It should be carried out by professional diplomats who assess the immediate and long-term consequences of the actions of the U.S. government. Foreign policy should be based on national self-interest. 2. United States foreign policy has been characterized by too many changes and wide swings in policy. U.S. foreign policy has too often been characterized by moral crusades and intense isolation. For example, the United States wanted to make the world safe for democracy during World War I, only to find itself quickly rejecting world leadership and retreating into isolationism. 3. The United States too often regards itself as a special nation that is not restricted by the same rules other nations should follow. 4. The American people too often believe their nation goes to war because of evil people, nations, or some ism. Americans too often go to war trying to cleanse the world of evil. 5. Americans too often treat war as a sporting event, going to war to win, and forgetting objectives consistent with their own self-interest. Nations do go to war, but wars are usually limited to a nationʼs foreign policy objectives that stem from self-interest. Nations go to war to gain territory, protect markets, etc., not just to win. 6. The United States too often tries to right every wrong and correct every injustice. The United States should simply do what is best for its own self-interest. The United States should avoid trying to speak for all humanity in its foreign policy. 7

9 DIPLOMATIC HISTORY The Radicals William Appleman Williams, The Tragedy of American Diplomacy Gabriel Kolko, Century of War: Politics, Conflicts, and Society Since 1914 Felix Greene, The Enemy 1. United States foreign policy is controlled by an economic elite who guide foreign policy to gain new economic markets and resources. 2. The economic elite manipulate and mislead the American people into believing that foreign policy objectives are matters of national rather than corporate or elite concern. The masses fight and die while the elite profits. 3. The United States is an imperialist nation that prevents small nations from controlling their own resources. 4. The United States has too often ignored the disadvantaged while pursuing an aggressive foreign policy. A more peaceful, understanding, and cooperative foreign policy must replace the policies the United States has traditionally pursued. This outline of historiography was taken, in part, from Historiography and the Essay by John Crum (found in Master the AP U.S. History Test, 8th Edition by John Crum and published by Thompson/Arco) For a listing of topics in U.S. history that includes a detailed historiography for each topic, see The Readerʼs Guide to American History by Perter J. Parish (Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers) 8

Political Culture: Beliefs of a people about their government and politics American ideals: Basis of our national identity

Political Culture: Beliefs of a people about their government and politics American ideals: Basis of our national identity Essential Questions: How has the American political process been shaped by different political ideologies, from left through right-wing thought? Is America too deeply divided by partisan politics and opposing

More information

University of Western Ontario Department of History Fall 2012

University of Western Ontario Department of History Fall 2012 University of Western Ontario Department of History Fall 2012 The Crucible of the Modern World: The United States and the International Community 2303F Dr. Jeffery Vacante Wed. 9:30-11:30am jvacant2@uwo.ca

More information

AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression.

AMERICAN FOREIGN POLICY. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression. result. If pacificism results in oppression, he must be willing to suffer oppression. C. Isolationism in Various Forms. There are many people who believe that America still can and should avoid foreign

More information

IB World History Conquest and Its Impact on the Modern Americas and Europe

IB World History Conquest and Its Impact on the Modern Americas and Europe IB World History 2017-2019 Conquest and Its Impact on the Modern Americas and Europe Website: Rippey- sphs.info This course is not: a thorough study of the history of both of these regions. You WILL NOT

More information

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA

POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA POST COLD WAR U.S. POLICY TOWARD ASIA Eric Her INTRODUCTION There is an ongoing debate among American scholars and politicians on the United States foreign policy and its changing role in East Asia. This

More information

AP US HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #1. Textbook: Carnes C. Mark & John A. Garraty. The American Nation: A History of the United States

AP US HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #1. Textbook: Carnes C. Mark & John A. Garraty. The American Nation: A History of the United States AP US HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #1 Textbook: Carnes C. Mark & John A. Garraty. The American Nation: A History of the United States H.W. #1 - Read 3-16 Native Americans Advanced Causation Essay - Explain why

More information

AP U.S. History Essay Questions, 1994-present. Document-Based Questions

AP U.S. History Essay Questions, 1994-present. Document-Based Questions AP U.S. History Essay Questions, 1994-present Although the essay questions from 1994-2014 were taken from AP exams administered before the redesign of the curriculum, most can still be used to prepare

More information

Kennedy, D. (2010). The American spirit: United States history as seen by contemporaries (12th ed.). Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.

Kennedy, D. (2010). The American spirit: United States history as seen by contemporaries (12th ed.). Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning. AP United States History 2016-2017 Grades 11 Length: 36 Weeks COURSE DESCRIPTION: Many people view history merely as a set of dates and facts to be memorized, but history is much more than that. History

More information

Neo-Nationalism and Future Warfare. SoSACorp Pauletta Otis, PhD (Gary Citrenbaum, PhD )

Neo-Nationalism and Future Warfare. SoSACorp Pauletta Otis, PhD (Gary Citrenbaum, PhD ) Neo-Nationalism and Future Warfare SoSACorp Pauletta Otis, PhD 703.989.9320. (Gary Citrenbaum, PhD 703.349.7056) 2018 The following countries are undergoing dramatic change Turkey 2018 Hungary 2018 Burma

More information

History 433. American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century

History 433. American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century History 433 American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century Fall 2002 Professor Jeremi Suri Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison Office: 5119 Humanities suri@facstaff.wisc.edu (608) 263-1852 Office hours:

More information

Syllabus HIST 5900 US Foreign Policy 1898 to 1945

Syllabus HIST 5900 US Foreign Policy 1898 to 1945 Syllabus HIST 5900 US Foreign Policy 1898 to 1945 Instructor: Dr. Graham Cox Office: Wooten Hall 255 Office Hours: TBA Office Telephone: 940.565.4526 Email: Graham.Cox@unt.edu When Emailing: Please put

More information

A Short History of the Long Memory of the Thai Nation Thongchai Winichakul Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

A Short History of the Long Memory of the Thai Nation Thongchai Winichakul Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison. A Short History of the Long Memory of the Thai Nation Thongchai Winichakul Department of History, University of Wisconsin-Madison. I. The 1880s-1900s was one of the most critical periods in the entire

More information

Diversity and Democratization in Bolivia:

Diversity and Democratization in Bolivia: : SOURCES OF INCLUSION IN AN INDIGENOUS MAJORITY SOCIETY May 2017 As in many other Latin American countries, the process of democratization in Bolivia has been accompanied by constitutional reforms that

More information

Today: (1) Political Parties and Elections (continued) (2) The Founders Legacy. (3) Westward Expansion and Democracy

Today: (1) Political Parties and Elections (continued) (2) The Founders Legacy. (3) Westward Expansion and Democracy Today: (1) Political Parties and Elections (continued) (2) The Founders Legacy (3) Westward Expansion and Democracy Structure and party politics U.S. System Single representative districts Plurality winner

More information

PEACE OR WAR? SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON EMPIRE AND US FOREIGN POLICY AND HOW TO BUILD A PEACEFUL WORLD

PEACE OR WAR? SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON EMPIRE AND US FOREIGN POLICY AND HOW TO BUILD A PEACEFUL WORLD 1 PEACE OR WAR? SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON EMPIRE AND US FOREIGN POLICY AND HOW TO BUILD A PEACEFUL WORLD Professor Charles Derber Meetings: Tuesday and Thursday,1:30-2:45; Spring Semester, 2009, 3 credits

More information

The New York Public Library Manuscripts and Archives Division. John P. Diggins Papers MssCol 18353

The New York Public Library Manuscripts and Archives Division. John P. Diggins Papers MssCol 18353 The New York Public Library Manuscripts and Archives Division John P. Diggins Papers 1966-2008 MssCol 18353 Lea Jordan November 2010 Table of Contents Summary... iii Related materials note... iv Biographical

More information

Was the Falange fascist?

Was the Falange fascist? Was the Falange fascist? In order to determine whether or not the Falange was fascist, it is first necessary to determine what fascism is and what is meant by the term. The historiography concerning the

More information

United States Diplomatic History/Diplomatic Relations

United States Diplomatic History/Diplomatic Relations Liberty University DigitalCommons@Liberty University Pedagogical Resources Helms School of Government Spring 1996 United States Diplomatic History/Diplomatic Relations Steven Alan Samson Liberty University,

More information

What is Democratic Socialism?

What is Democratic Socialism? What is Democratic Socialism? SOURCE: https://www.dsausa.org/about-us/what-is-democratic-socialism/ What is Democratic Socialism? Democratic socialists believe that both the economy and society should

More information

History 753 The Cold War as World Histories

History 753 The Cold War as World Histories 1 History 753 The Cold War as World Histories Mondays, 1:20pm 3:20pm Professor Jeremi Suri Fall 2006 suri@wisc.edu or 263-1852 University of Wisconsin 5119 Humanities Building 5245 Humanities Building

More information

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Social Studies

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Social Studies Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Social Studies Mission Statement It is our belief that Social Studies education is ultimately to prepare students to assume the responsibilities

More information

U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Honors

U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Honors Honors traces the nation's history from the pre-colonial period to the present. Students learn about the Native American, European, and African people who lived in America before it became the United States.

More information

History (HIST) History (HIST) 1

History (HIST) History (HIST) 1 History (HIST) 1 History (HIST) HIST 110 Fndn. of American Liberty 3.0 SH [GEH] A survey of American history from the colonial era to the present which looks at how the concept of liberty has both changed

More information

Advanced Placement United States History Syllabus Rappahannock High School

Advanced Placement United States History Syllabus Rappahannock High School Page 1 of 6 Advanced Placement United States History Syllabus Rappahannock High School 2011-2012 Course Design and Purpose: The Advance Placement program in United States History is designed to provide

More information

Mr. Meighen AP World History Summer Assignment

Mr. Meighen AP World History Summer Assignment Mr. Meighen AP World History Summer Assignment 11 th Grade AP World History serves as an advanced-level Social Studies class whose purpose is to analyze the development and interactions of difference civilizations,

More information

American Foreign Policy After the 2008 Elections

American Foreign Policy After the 2008 Elections American Foreign Policy After the 2008 Elections Henry R. Nau Professor of Political Science and International Affairs Elliott School of International Affairs The George Washington University Lecture at

More information

Obama s Imperial War. Wayne Price. An Anarchist Response

Obama s Imperial War. Wayne Price. An Anarchist Response The expansion of the US attack on Afghanistan and Pakistan is not due to the personal qualities of Obama but to the social system he serves: the national state and the capitalist economy. The nature of

More information

Liberals (aka the Left)

Liberals (aka the Left) Liberals (aka the Left) more regulation of economic (money) issues less regulation of personal (individual freedom) issues Conservatives (aka the Right) less regulation of economic (money) issues more

More information

Unit 3- Hammering Out a Federal Republic

Unit 3- Hammering Out a Federal Republic Name: Class Period: Unit 3- Hammering Out a Federal Republic Key Concepts FOR PERIOD 3: Key Concept 3.2: The American Revolution s democratic and republican ideals inspired new experiments with different

More information

Woodrow Wilson and the First World War

Woodrow Wilson and the First World War Woodrow Wilson and the First World War Start date 20 March 2015 End date 22 March 2015 Venue Madingley Hall Madingley Cambridge Tutor Dr John Thompson Course code 1415NRX108 Director of Programmes For

More information

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Advanced Placement

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Advanced Placement Advanced Placement AP U.S. History In, students investigate the development of American economics, politics, and culture through historical analysis grounded in primary sources, research, and writing.

More information

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Advanced Placement

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: Advanced Placement Advanced Placement AP U.S. History In, students investigate the development of American economics, politics, and culture through historical analysis grounded in primary sources, research, and writing.

More information

Compilation of DBQs and FRQs from Italics that are underlined =not 100% aligned with the section it is written in

Compilation of DBQs and FRQs from Italics that are underlined =not 100% aligned with the section it is written in Compilation of DBQs and FRQs from 2000. Italics that are underlined =not 100% aligned with the section it is written in How to find online: "YEAR FRQs" and "AP US History" and "Scoring Guidelines" Colonial

More information

Required Text: Howard Zinn. Voices of a People s History of the United States

Required Text: Howard Zinn. Voices of a People s History of the United States United States History 101 Sections: 2326 Mon-Thurs 1:00-3:10 PM & 2332 Mon-Thurs 4:00-6:10 PM El Camino College Summer 2011 Room Art B 338 Office hours 3:30-4:00 PM Mondays -Thursdays Instructor: Edgar

More information

CHANGE IN STATE NATURE WORKSHOP

CHANGE IN STATE NATURE WORKSHOP VISION DOCUMENT ( DRAFT ) CHANGE IN STATE NATURE WORKSHOP Expectation Management and Security ( 03-05 December 2015, Istanbul ) It is necessary to have lots of solders and armies for a homeland It is also

More information

HONORS US HISTORY FORM III

HONORS US HISTORY FORM III HONORS US HISTORY FORM III Textbook: David M. Kennedy, Lizabeth, Cohen, and Thomas A. Bailey, The American Pageant: A History of the Republic (Boston: McDougal Littell /Houghton Mifflin, (2007) Prerequisites:

More information

CHAPTER TWO EARLY GOVERNANCE AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK

CHAPTER TWO EARLY GOVERNANCE AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK CHAPTER TWO EARLY GOVERNANCE AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK CHAPTER OVERVIEW Chapter 2 begins by introducing some of the most basic terms of political and economic systems: government and politics; democracy

More information

ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY (APUSH) COURSE REQUIREMENTS

ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY (APUSH) COURSE REQUIREMENTS ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES HISTORY (APUSH) 2017-2018 COURSE REQUIREMENTS TEACHER: Ms. Heading, University High School CONTACT: Engrade message (preferred) email: aheading@k12.wv.us TEXTBOOK: GIVE

More information

Prentice Hall. Out of Many North Carolina Course of Study for Advanced Placement to United States History

Prentice Hall. Out of Many North Carolina Course of Study for Advanced Placement to United States History Prentice Hall Out of Many 2007 C O R R E L A T E D T O North Carolina Course of Study for Advanced Placement to United States History ADVANCED PLACEMENT UNITED STATES Advanced Placement United States History

More information

Name Per. 2. Identify the important principles and issues debated at the Constitutional Convention and describe how they were resolved.

Name Per. 2. Identify the important principles and issues debated at the Constitutional Convention and describe how they were resolved. Name Per CHAPTER 2 THE CONSTITUTION LEARNING OBJECTIVES After studying Chapter 2, you should be able to: 1. Discuss the importance of the English philosophical heritage, the colonial experience, the Articles

More information

ADVANCED PLACEMENT MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY

ADVANCED PLACEMENT MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY ADVANCED PLACEMENT MODERN EUROPEAN HISTORY Description The Advanced Placement Modern European History course deals with the facts, ideas, events and personalities, which have shaped Europe s history from

More information

1) Is the "Clash of Civilizations" too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not?

1) Is the Clash of Civilizations too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not? 1) Is the "Clash of Civilizations" too broad of a conceptualization to be of use? Why or why not? Huntington makes good points about the clash of civilizations and ideologies being a cause of conflict

More information

Why Is America Exceptional?

Why Is America Exceptional? Why Is America Exceptional? 3 Matthew Spalding, Ph.D. Why Is America Exceptional? In 1776, when America announced its independence as a nation, it was composed of thirteen colonies surrounded by hostile

More information

The New Republic. Launching of the New Government

The New Republic. Launching of the New Government The New Republic Launching of the New Government Debate over Ratification Framers called for each state to have a special convention and then vote 9/13 needed to ratify Constitution Federalists Antifederalists

More information

Published online: 29 May 2013.

Published online: 29 May 2013. This article was downloaded by: [University of San Francisco] On: 15 July 2013, At: 11:37 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office:

More information

Chapter Discussion Questions Spring Semester- APUSH

Chapter Discussion Questions Spring Semester- APUSH Chapter Discussion Questions Spring Semester- APUSH **These questions will be used for class discussions, small group discussions, inner/outer circle, ect. As you are reading the chapter, be thinking about

More information

"Irish Canadian Conflict and the Struggle for Irish Independence, (Book Review)" by Robert McLaughlin

Irish Canadian Conflict and the Struggle for Irish Independence, (Book Review) by Robert McLaughlin Canadian Military History Volume 24 Issue 1 Article 20 7-6-2015 "Irish Canadian Conflict and the Struggle for Irish Independence, 1912-1925 (Book Review)" by Robert McLaughlin Brendan O Driscoll Recommended

More information

Period 6 Crash Course Viewer s Guide

Period 6 Crash Course Viewer s Guide Name: Period 6 Crash Course Viewer s Guide AP World History Directions: View each of the Crash Course videos on YouTube and respond to the questions below before class. John Green speaks very quickly,

More information

U.S. HISTORY: POST-RECONSTRUCTION TO PRESENT

U.S. HISTORY: POST-RECONSTRUCTION TO PRESENT U.S. HISTORY: POST-RECONSTRUCTION TO PRESENT The U.S. History: Post-Reconstruction to Present framework requires students to examine the major turning points in American history from the period following

More information

Perspectives on International Politics Pt. I

Perspectives on International Politics Pt. I Perspectives on International Politics Pt. I Professor McGill Spring 2014 What we ll cover Looking at the world: How do we see it? Major perspectives of international relations Three dominant views: Realism

More information

Preparing the Revolution

Preparing the Revolution CHAPTER FOUR Preparing the Revolution In most of our history courses, students learn about brave patriots who prepared for the Revolutionary War by uniting against a tyrannical king and oppressive English

More information

Chapter 5. A Virtuous Republic Creating a Workable Government,

Chapter 5. A Virtuous Republic Creating a Workable Government, Chapter 5 A Virtuous Republic Creating a Workable Government, 1783 1789 CHAPTER FIVE: A VIRTUOUS REPUBLIC: CREATING A WORKABLE GOVERNMENT 1783-1789 What did virtue mean to the Founders of the American

More information

SENIOR 4: WESTERN CIVILIZATION HISTORICAL REVIEW OF ITS DEVELOPMENT (OPTIONAL)

SENIOR 4: WESTERN CIVILIZATION HISTORICAL REVIEW OF ITS DEVELOPMENT (OPTIONAL) SENIOR 4: WESTERN CIVILIZATION HISTORICAL REVIEW OF ITS DEVELOPMENT (OPTIONAL) The Senior 4 Western Civilization curriculum is designed to help students understand that Canadian society and other Western

More information

International Law and the American National Interest

International Law and the American National Interest International Law and the American National Interest Michael Byers* I. INTRODUCTION There are those, John Bolton' and Paul Stephan 2 among them, who worry that international law poses something of a threat

More information

AP WORLD HISTORY GUIDED READINGS UNIT 6: 1900-Present

AP WORLD HISTORY GUIDED READINGS UNIT 6: 1900-Present AP WORLD HISTORY GUIDED READINGS UNIT 6: 1900-Present As you read each chapter, answer the core questions within this packet. You should also define vocabulary words listed in the Key Terms packet. When

More information

Chapter 25 Section 1. Section 1. Terms and People

Chapter 25 Section 1. Section 1. Terms and People Chapter 25 Terms and People republic a government in which the people elect their representatives unicameral legislature a lawmaking body with a single house whose representatives are elected by the people

More information

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District AP European History Grades 9-12

West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District AP European History Grades 9-12 West Windsor-Plainsboro Regional School District AP European History Grades 9-12 Unit 1: The Renaissance through the Age of Religious Wars: 1450 1600 Content Area: Social Studies Course & Grade Level:

More information

History 433 American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century

History 433 American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century History 433 American Foreign Relations Before the Twentieth Century 1 Fall 2006 Professor Jeremi Suri Lectures: MWF 8:50-9:40 AM 1641 Humanities Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison Discussion 302: T 9:55-10:45

More information

A SELECTION OF PAST AP U.S. FREE RESPONSE QUESTIONS: Part 1: Colonial Period to Civil War

A SELECTION OF PAST AP U.S. FREE RESPONSE QUESTIONS: Part 1: Colonial Period to Civil War A SELECTION OF PAST AP U.S. FREE RESPONSE QUESTIONS: Part 1: Colonial Period to Civil War Colonial Times 1607-1775 1. From 1600-1763, several European nations vied for control of the North American continent.

More information

HS AP US History Social Studies

HS AP US History Social Studies Scope And Sequence Timeframe Unit Instructional Topics 5 Week(s) Course Rationale This course provides a broad-based understanding of our past as well as prepares students for college-level academics.

More information

Optional Course Text: Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty! (New York: W.W. Norton) Any edition works.

Optional Course Text: Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty! (New York: W.W. Norton) Any edition works. Prof. Michael Wise Office: Wooten Hall 259 Hours: W 3:00-6:00 PM, or by appt. E-mail: michael.wise@unt.edu United States History from 1865 History 2620-013 Spring 2014 T 6:30-9:20 PM Wooten Hall 222 University

More information

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study American History

Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study American History K-12 Social Studies Vision Dublin City Schools Social Studies Graded Course of Study The Dublin City Schools K-12 Social Studies Education will provide many learning opportunities that will help students

More information

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: LESSON 1: THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

AP U.S. History UNIT 1: TRANSFORMATION IN NORTH AMERICA: LESSON 1: THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN Advanced Placement AP U.S. History In AP* U.S. History, students investigate the development of American economics, politics, and culture through historical analysis grounded in primary sources, research,

More information

APUSH ESSAY PLANNING

APUSH ESSAY PLANNING APUSH ESSAY PLANNING Time Period # of writing questions (analyzed from 24 released exams) LEQ DBQ SA LEQ DBQ SA Total (appearances out of 24 past exams) 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 12 0 2 14% 0% 25% 58% 3 10 3 2

More information

The Carter Reagan Bush Consensus

The Carter Reagan Bush Consensus CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE The Carter Reagan Bush Consensus by Ron Perry Chapter 21 in Voices, The Carter Reagan Bush Consensus, provides readers with a perspective that allows them to better understand present-day

More information

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge

A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge Rapport, M. (2013) The Napoleonic Wars: A Very Short Introduction. Series: Very short introductions (344). Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK. ISBN 9780199590964 Copyright 2013 Oxford University Press.

More information

ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE

ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE POLITICAL CULTURE Every country has a political culture - a set of widely shared beliefs, values, and norms concerning the ways that political and economic life ought to be carried out. The political culture

More information

Required Text: Howard Zinn. Voices of a People s History of the United States

Required Text: Howard Zinn. Voices of a People s History of the United States United States History 1A: Section 2264 Monday and Weds. 7:45 9:10AM Fall 2009 Room Soc Sci 109 Instructor: Edgar Pacas Contact information: eapacas@hotmail.com (primary email) Office SS 202B Course Syllabus:

More information

Lead up to World War II

Lead up to World War II Lead up to World War II Overview 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 1910 s 1930 s Event Recap Political Spectrum Rise of Dictators Failure of the League of Nations Preview: Appeasement Compare and Contrast Causes of World

More information

Conclusion: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Transatlantic Quest for Equality and Freedom

Conclusion: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Transatlantic Quest for Equality and Freedom European journal of American studies Vol 12, no 1 2017 Spring 2017: Special Issue - Eleanor Roosevelt and Diplomacy in the Public Interest Conclusion: Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Transatlantic Quest for

More information

CHAPTER 2 THE CONSTITUTION. Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives

CHAPTER 2 THE CONSTITUTION. Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives CHAPTER 2 THE CONSTITUTION Chapter Goals and Learning Objectives To build a house you first must lay a foundation. The foundation buttresses the structure, gives it support and definition. You build your

More information

BACKGROUND AND EXTREME ALTERNATIVES IN FOREIGN POLICY

BACKGROUND AND EXTREME ALTERNATIVES IN FOREIGN POLICY BACKGROUND AND EXTREME ALTERNATIVES IN FOREIGN POLICY Presented by Wallace E. Ogg I. UNDERSTANDING AMERICA'S PROBLEMS OF LEADERSHIP IN INTERNATIONAL AF- FAIRS As America reluctantly accepts leadership

More information

communism Advantages DISAdvantages An economic ideology A Few Examples:

communism Advantages DISAdvantages An economic ideology A Few Examples: communism An economic ideology Advantages It embodies equality It makes health care, education, and employment accessible to citizens. It does not allow business monopolies. I am communist because I believe

More information

Report Workshop 1. Sustaining peace at local level

Report Workshop 1. Sustaining peace at local level Report Workshop 1. Sustaining peace at local level This workshop centred around the question: how can development actors be more effective in sustaining peace at the local level? The following issues were

More information

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS)

POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS) Political Science (POLS) 1 POLITICAL SCIENCE (POLS) POLS 102 Introduction to Politics (3 crs) A general introduction to basic concepts and approaches to the study of politics and contemporary political

More information

ANARCHISM: What it is, and what it ain t...

ANARCHISM: What it is, and what it ain t... ANARCHISM: What it is, and what it ain t... INTRODUCTION. This pamphlet is a reprinting of an essay by Lawrence Jarach titled Instead Of A Meeting: By Someone Too Irritated To Sit Through Another One.

More information

Ashbrook Teacher Institute. Schedule Overview

Ashbrook Teacher Institute. Schedule Overview Ashbrook Teacher Institute Ideas and Traditions in American Foreign Relations Sunday, July 11, 2004 to Friday, July 16, 2004 Instructors: John Moser and Jeremi Suri Sunday, July 11 Schedule Overview 2:00

More information

US History A. Syllabus. Course Overview. Course Goals. General Skills

US History A. Syllabus. Course Overview. Course Goals. General Skills Syllabus US History A Course Overview US History is the study of the events, people, and culture of the United States over time. In US History A, you will learn about the process of historical inquiry,

More information

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform U.S. society and its economic system.

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform U.S. society and its economic system. WXT-2.0: Explain how patterns of exchange, markets, and private enterprise have developed, and analyze ways that governments have responded to economic issues. WXT-3.0: Analyze how technological innovation

More information

COMMENTS ON AZIZ RANA, THE TWO FACES OF AMERICAN FREEDOM

COMMENTS ON AZIZ RANA, THE TWO FACES OF AMERICAN FREEDOM COMMENTS ON AZIZ RANA, THE TWO FACES OF AMERICAN FREEDOM Richard Bensel* Aziz Rana has written a wonderfully rich and splendid book, in part because he clearly understands that good history should be written

More information

Period 1: Period 2:

Period 1: Period 2: Period 1: 1491 1607 Period 2: 1607 1754 2014 - #2: Explain how intellectual and religious movements impacted the development of colonial North America from 1607 to 1776. 2013 - #2: Explain how trans-atlantic

More information

An Introduction to Documents of Freedom

An Introduction to Documents of Freedom An Introduction to Documents of Freedom In 1781, after the Americans won the Battle of Yorktown, the British General Charles Cornwallis surrendered, effectively ending the Revolutionary War. Tradition

More information

How will you assess mastery of the standard? 8th Grade Key Terms What do the Students Have to Know to Master the Standard?

How will you assess mastery of the standard? 8th Grade Key Terms What do the Students Have to Know to Master the Standard? Government & Civics The study of government and civics equips students to understand the nature of government and the unique characteristics of representative democracy in the United States, including

More information

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform US society and its economic system.

Key Concept 7.1: Growth expanded opportunity, while economic instability led to new efforts to reform US society and its economic system. PERIOD 7: 1890 1945 The content for APUSH is divided into 9 periods. The outline below contains the required course content for Period 7. The Thematic Learning Objectives (historical themes) are included

More information

Name: Date: Period: Chapter 23 Reading Guide The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West, p

Name: Date: Period: Chapter 23 Reading Guide The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West, p Name: Date: Period: Chapter 23 Reading Guide The Emergence of Industrial Society in the West, 1750-1914 p.526-548 1. Use the map below and your textbook or online resource to identify the following places:

More information

SECURITY CHALLENGES IN THE ASIA- PACIFIC REGION: A US PERSPECTIVE

SECURITY CHALLENGES IN THE ASIA- PACIFIC REGION: A US PERSPECTIVE SECURITY CHALLENGES IN THE ASIA- PACIFIC REGION: A US PERSPECTIVE Patrick M. Cronin alliance.ussc.edu.au October 2012 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Analysts should not discount the continued threat posed by North

More information

The Politics of reconciliation in multicultural societies 1, Will Kymlicka and Bashir Bashir

The Politics of reconciliation in multicultural societies 1, Will Kymlicka and Bashir Bashir The Politics of reconciliation in multicultural societies 1, Will Kymlicka and Bashir Bashir Bashir Bashir, a research fellow at the Department of Political Science at the Hebrew University and The Van

More information

America Past and Present 9 th Edition, AP* Edition 2011

America Past and Present 9 th Edition, AP* Edition 2011 A Correlation of America Past and Present 9 th Edition, AP* Edition 2011 To the ADVANCED PLACEMENT U.S. HISTORY TOPIC OUTLINE *, Program, AP, and Pre-AP are registered trademarks of the College Board,

More information

Grading & Best Practices

Grading & Best Practices Politics 190D: Early Socialist and Anarchist Thought Summer Session I, 2016 University of California, Santa Cruz Social Sciences 2, Room 171 (Tues/Thurs 1:00-4:30 pm) Andrew J. Wood, Instructor Office

More information

7-2. Comment on the manner in which the collectivist experiments of early communism addressed questions of gender and class?

7-2. Comment on the manner in which the collectivist experiments of early communism addressed questions of gender and class? 7-2. Comment on the manner in which the collectivist experiments of early communism addressed questions of gender and class? Community : Efficiency : Prosperity Ophelia Wilkins The basic principle underlying

More information

Saint Patrick High School

Saint Patrick High School Saint Patrick High School U.S. History Curriculum Guide Department: Social Studies Grade and Level: Sophomore and Junior Phoenix, CP, Honors, and AP/PACC Class: U.S. History Term (Semester or Year): Three

More information

LESSON TWO: THE FEDERALIST PAPERS

LESSON TWO: THE FEDERALIST PAPERS LESSON TWO: THE FEDERALIST PAPERS OVERVIEW OBJECTIVES Students will be able to: Identify the Articles of Confederation and explain why it failed. Explain the argument over the need for a bill of rights

More information

The Constitutional Convention. Chapter 2 Section 4

The Constitutional Convention. Chapter 2 Section 4 The Constitutional Convention Chapter 2 Section 4 Constitutional Convention May 1787 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 74 delegates allowed, 55 attended, 39 signed final Delegates to the Convention Had lots of

More information

Mexicanos, Second Edition: A History Of Mexicans In The United States epubs

Mexicanos, Second Edition: A History Of Mexicans In The United States epubs Mexicanos, Second Edition: A History Of Mexicans In The United States epubs Newly revised and updated, Mexicanos tells the rich and vibrant story of Mexicans in the United States. Emerging from the ruins

More information

Wednesday, October 12 th

Wednesday, October 12 th Wednesday, October 12 th Draft of Essay #1 Due TODAY! Final Essay #1 Due Wednesday, Oct. 26 th Federalism NATIONAL L J E STATE L J E The Founders on Government Government is not reason; it is not eloquent;

More information

Politics as Usual. Part 1: Unity vs. Opposition

Politics as Usual. Part 1: Unity vs. Opposition Politics as Usual Part 1: Unity vs. Opposition Monday, February 27 th COMING SOON: Essay #2 due at the START of labs on March 15 th or 16 th Remember to submit paper via blackboards Turn-It- In function

More information

1/6 THE WORKING CLASS WERE IN POWER!!!! ENORMOUS PRESTIGE OF THE BOLSHEVIKS/CP

1/6 THE WORKING CLASS WERE IN POWER!!!! ENORMOUS PRESTIGE OF THE BOLSHEVIKS/CP 1/6 LECTURE 03 THE NEW LEFT AND ANTI-CAPITALISM Today I want to talk about what the modern Anti-Capitalist movement shares with the New Left that began to arise after the Hungarian Revolution of 1956.

More information

Chapter 27 The Cold War at Home and Abroad,

Chapter 27 The Cold War at Home and Abroad, Chapter 27 The Cold War at Home and Abroad, 1946 1952 Chapter Summary Chapter 27 examines the post-world War II history of America. Topics covered in the chapter include postwar domestic developments with

More information

I. A.P UNITED STATES HISTORY

I. A.P UNITED STATES HISTORY I. A.P UNITED STATES HISTORY II. Statement of Purpose Advanced Placement United States History is a comprehensive survey course designed to foster analysis of and critical reflection on the significant

More information

CLASSROOM Primary Documents

CLASSROOM Primary Documents CLASSROOM Primary Documents The Revolution of 1801 Thomas Jefferson s First Inaugural Address : March 4, 1801 On December 13, 2000 thirty-six days after Americans cast their votes for president of the

More information