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Major problems in American history since 1945 Book

Major problems in American history since 1945
Major problems in American history since 1945, This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions.
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Major problems in American history since 1945, This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions. , Major problems in American history since 1945
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  • Major problems in American history since 1945
  • Written by author Robert Griffith,Baker,Paterson
  • Published by Boston, Mass. : Houghton Mifflin Company, c2001., 2001/02/23
  • This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions.
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Contents

  • 1. World War II and the Origins of Postwar America
    ESSAYS
    Thomas G. Paterson, The Origins of the Postwar International System
    Alan Wolfe, The Roots of Postwar Politics
    Alan Brinkley, The Legacies of World War II
    • 2. From World War II to the Cold War: The Atomic Bombing of Japan
      DOCUMENTS
      1. President Harry S Truman's Advisors Discuss the Atomic Bomb, May 1945
      2. Atomic Scientists Urge an Alternative Course, June 1945
      3. U.S. Science Advisers Endorse Dropping the Bomb, June 1945
      4. Undersecretary of the Navy Ralph Bard Urges Alternatives, June 1945
      5. General Leslie Groves Reports on a Successful Test, July 1945
      6. President Truman Discusses the Bomb at Potsdam, July 1945
      7. The U.S. Strategic Bombing Survey Concludes That the Bomb Was Unnecessary, 1946
      ESSAYS
      Robert James Maddox, The Biggest Decision: Why We Had to Drop the Atomic Bomb
      Gar Alperovitz, Hiroshima: Historians Reassess
      • 3. The Cold War Begins
        DOCUMENTS
        1. President Harry S Truman and His Advisers Debate U.S. Policy Toward the U.S.S.R., April 1945
        2. Russian Premier Joseph Stalin Defends Soviet Policy in Eastern Europe, April 1945
        3. Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace Urges a Conciliatory Approach, July 1946
        4. White House Aide Clark M. Clifford Summarizes the Case for the Hard Line, September 1946
        5. Soviet Ambassador Nikolai Novikov Reports on the U.S. Drive for World Supremacy, September 1946
        6. The Truman Doctrine, March 1947
        7. Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson Calls for Economic Aid to Europe, May 1947
        8. The President's Advisers Urge Military Expansion,April 1950
        9. President Truman and His Advisers Determine the United States' Response to the Invasion of South Korea, June 26, 1950
        ESSAYS
        John Lewis Gaddis, Soviet Unilateralism and the Origins of the Cold War
        Thomas G. Paterson, An Exaggerated Threat and the Rise of American Globalism
        • 4. Affluence and Discontent in the 1950s
          DOCUMENTS
          1. Life Magazine Identifies the New Teen-age Market, 1959
          2. Newsweek Decries the Problem of Dangerous Teens, 1955
          3. U.S. News and World Report Assesses the Peril of Mass Culture and the Evils of Television, 1955
          4. Congress Investigates Homosexuals as Subversives, 1950
          5. Graphic Illustrations of How to Respond to a Nuclear Attack, 1950
          ESSAYS
          Beth Bailey, Rebels Without a Cause: Teenagers in the 1950s
          Roland Marchand, Visions of Classlessness
          • 5. John F. Kennedy, the Cuban Revolution, and the Cold War
            DOCUMENTS
            1. Fidel Castro Denounces U.S. Policy Toward Cuba, 1960
            2. President John F. Kennedy Calls for an Alliance for Progress, 1961
            3. A Board of Inquiry Reports on the Bay of Pigs, 1961
            4. President Kennedy and His Advisers Debate Options in the Missile Crisis, October 16, 1962
            5. Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev Appeals to President Kennedy, October 26, 1962
            6. Anastas I. Mikhoyan and Fidel Castro Review the Crisis, November 3–4, 1962
            ESSAYS
            Thomas G. Paterson, Spinning Out of Control: Kennedy's War Against Cuba and the Missile Crisis
            Ernest R. May and Philip D. Zelikow, Aftermath
            • 6. Lyndon B. Johnson, the Great Society, and American Liberalism
              DOCUMENTS
              1. Michael Harrington Describes the "Other America," 1962
              2. President Lyndon B. Johnson Declares War on Poverty, 1964
              3. President Ronald Reagan Warns of the Dangers of the Welfare State, 1964
              4. A Liberal Cartoonist Worries That Johnson Has Abandoned the Great Society, 1965
              5. Two White House Aides Report the Achievements of the Great Society, 1966
              6. Poverty in America, 1959–1997: A Graphic
              ESSAYS
              Ira Katznelson, Was the Great Society a Lost Opportunity?
              Gareth Davies, From Opportunity to Entitlement
              • 7 . Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Struggle for African American Equality
                DOCUMENTS
                1. The New York Times Reports a Murder in Georgia, 1946
                2. Malcolm X Recalls Getting a "Conk," 1964
                3. Brown v. Board of Education, 1954
                4. Franklin McCain Remembers the First Sit-In, 1960
                5. Martin Luther King, Jr., "I Have a Dream," 1963
                6. Stokley Carmichael Explains "Black Power," 1967
                7. A Senate Committee Reports on the FBI's Campaign Against Martin Luther King, Jr., 1976
                ESSAYS
                Vincent Gordon Harding, King as Disturber of the Peace
                Thomas J. Sugrue, American's Continuing Racial Crisis
                • 8. Vietnam and the Crisis of American Empire
                  DOCUMENTS
                  1. The Vietnamese Declare Their Independence, 1945
                  2. State Department Advisers Debate U.S. Support for the French in Vietnam, 1949
                  3. President Dwight D. Eisenhower Explains the Domino Theory, 1954
                  4. Final Declaration of the Geneva Conference on Indochina, 1954
                  5. Nguyen Tan Thanh, a South Vietnamese Peasant, Explains Why He Joined the Vietcong (1961), 1986
                  6. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, 1964
                  7. President Lyndon Johnson's Advisers Debate Expanding the War, 1965
                  8. Lieutenant Marion Lee Kempner, a Young Marine, Explains the War, 1966
                  9. Wrong, Rambo! A Vietnam Veteran Looks Back, 1985
                  ESSAYS
                  George McT. Kahin, The Cold War and American Intervention in Vietnam
                  George C. Herring, The Meaning of Vietnam
                  • 9. The New Left and the Politics of the 1960s
                    DOCUMENTS
                    1. The Port Huron Statement, 1963
                    2. The Sharon Statement, 1960
                    3. The Weatherman's Call for Revolution: "You Don't Need a Weatherman to Know Which Way the Wind Blows," 1969
                    4. Raymond Mungo Searches for a New Age at Total Loss Farm, 1970
                    5. Two Disillusioned Ex-Radicals Bid Good-bye to the Sixties, 1985
                    6. Tom Hayden Recalls a Time of Greatness and Wonder, 1988
                    ESSAYS
                    Maurice Isserman and Michael Kazin, The Contradictory Legacy of the Sixties
                    Rick Perlstein, Who Owns the Sixties
                    • 10. From the Feminine Mystique to the New Feminism
                      DOCUMENTS
                      1. Betty Friedan on the Problem That Has No Name, 1963
                      2. NOW Statement of Purpose, 1966
                      3. Feminists Analyze the Welfare System, 1970
                      4. Redstockings Manifesto, 1970
                      5. A Redbook Magazine Reader Discovers Consciousness-Raising
                      6. Phyllis Schlafly Proclaims the Power of the Positive Woman, 1977
                      ESSAYS
                      Martha F. Davies, Welfare Rights and Women's Rights in the 1960s
                      Alice Echols, Women's Liberation and Sixties Radicalism
                      • 11. Richard M. Nixon, Watergate, and the Crisis of the "Imperial" Presidency
                        DOCUMENTS
                        1. Richard M. Nixon on Being President, 1972
                        2. White House Counsel John W. Dean II Presents the "Enemies List," 1971
                        3. President Nixon Discusses the Watergate Break-in with Aide H.R. Haldeman, 1972
                        4. Senator Sam J. Ervin on Watergate, 1974
                        5. President Nixon's Farewell, 1974
                        ESSAYS
                        James A. Nuechterlein, Escaping Watergate: A Revisionist View of the Nixon Presidency
                        Stanley I. Kutler, The Inescapability of Watergate
                        • 12. The Reagan Revolution and After: Politics and Political Economy in the New Era
                          DOCUMENTS
                          1. President Jimmy Carter and the Crisis of the American Spirit, 1979
                          2. Presidential Candidate Ronald Reagan Calls for New Economic Policies, 1980
                          3. President George Bush Seeks a Kinder, Gentler Nation, 1989
                          4. The Republican "Contract with America," 1994
                          5. President Bill Clinton Signs a Bill "To End Welfare as We Know It," 1996
                          6. A Liberal Postmortem on the 1996 Election, 1997
                          ESSAYS
                          Thomas Byrne Edsall, The Mobilization of American Business
                          Daniel Yergin and Joseph Stanislaw, Democrats and Republicans Forge a New Political Economy
                          • 13. The Empire Strikes Back: Ronald Reagan and the End of the Cold War
                            DOCUMENTS
                            1. President Ronald Reagan Denounces the Soviet Union as an "Evil" Empire, 1982
                            2. U.S. Military Spending, 1980-1990: A Graphic
                            3. A Congressional Committee Reports on "Irangate," 1987
                            4. Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev Charts a New Direction for the U.S.S.R., 1988
                            5. The New York Times Announces the End of the Cold War, 1989
                            6. President George Bush Proclaims a New World Order, 1990
                            ESSAYS
                            John Lewis Gaddis, Ronald Reagan's Cold War Victory
                            Richard Ned Lebow and Janet Gross Stein, Reagan and the Russians
                            William M. LeoGrande, Reagan and Central America
                            • 14. Brave New World: The United States and the Global Era
                              ESSAYS
                              Robert D. Atkinson and Randolph H. Court, The "New Economy" of the 1990s
                              Benjamin R. Barber, Jihad vs. McWorld
                              Ronald Takaki, America as a New World "Borderland"
                              Michael Schudson, A Gathering of Citizens


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Major problems in American history since 1945, This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions.
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Major problems in American history since 1945, This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions.
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Major problems in American history since 1945, This text presents a carefully selected group of readings—on topics such as the Cold War and Watergate—organized to allow students to evaluate primary sources, test the interpretations of distinguished historians, and draw their own conclusions.
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Major problems in American history since 1945

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