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E-raamat: Building the American Republic, Volume 1: A Narrative History to 1877

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2018
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226300658
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jan-2018
  • Kirjastus: University of Chicago Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780226300658

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Now more than ever, we need informed citizens who bring a thorough knowledge of America's history to community life and the political process. Understanding what built our republic allows us to better maintain its democracy. These books are here to help. Harry L. Watson and Jane Dailey have set out to bring a highly readable, comprehensive telling of American history to the widest audience possible. And to that end, it will be one of the first American history textbooks to be offered completely free in digital form.Building the Republic deftly combines centuries of perspectives and voices into a fluid narrative of the United States. Through crisp, incisive prose it takes readers through the full scope of American history, starting with the first inhabitants and carrying all the way to the 2016 election. Throughout, Watson and Dailey emphasize the struggle for justice and equality in a more perfect union, the challenge of racial and ethnic conflict, the evolution of law and legal norms, the enduring influence of religious diversity, and the distinctive history and influence of the South. They take care to integrate varied scholarly perspectives into their chapters and work to engage a diverse readership by addressing what we all share in common: membership in a democratic republic, with joint claims on its self-governing tradition. These two volumes will enable readers and students to gain a full understanding of America. They combine open-access text with rigorous academic standards and the backing of a major university press. By presenting a straightforward, absorbing history that's accessible to all readers, Watson and Dailey hope that more citizens will gain the knowledge they need to make the best possible choices for their country.
Preface xvii
1 First Americans, to 1550
1(34)
Land, Climate, and First Peoples
2(1)
From the Land Bridge to Agriculture
2(2)
Puebloan Villagers, the First Townspeople
4(1)
Mississippian Chiefdoms
5(1)
Woodland Peoples of the East
6(2)
The Empires of Central and South America
8(1)
The Expanding Nations of Europe
9(1)
Population Growth and Prosperity
10(1)
Religious Rivalry and Trade
11(2)
Portugal's First Steps
13(1)
The World of West Africa
14(1)
The People of West Africa
14(1)
Sugar and Slaves
15(1)
The Early Slave Trade
16(2)
Europe Comes to America
18(1)
The Voyages of Columbus
19(3)
Spain's Rivals and Imitators
22(1)
The Conquest of Mexico and Peru
23(1)
Spain in North America
24(2)
After Columbus
26(1)
Modes of Conquest
27(2)
The Columbian Exchange
29(1)
Understanding America
30(5)
2 The First English Colonies, 1584--1676
35(40)
England and the Atlantic
37(1)
A New Atlantic World
38(2)
Reformation and Empire
40(2)
The Price Revolution and Its Consequences
42(1)
The Enterprise of Virginia
43(1)
Roanoke and Jamestown
44(1)
Surviving in Powhatan's Virginia
45(2)
Tobacco
47(1)
Plantations and Bond Servants
48(2)
Stabilizing the Chesapeake
50(1)
Indian Wars and Royal Government
50(2)
Economic and Social Stability
52(1)
Maryland Joins Virginia
53(1)
Bacon's Rebellion
54(2)
Puritan America
56(1)
The Puritan Faith
56(3)
Plymouth's Pilgrims
59(1)
Massachusetts's Great Migration
60(1)
"God's Commonwealth"
61(1)
A Covenanted People
62(1)
Town, Church, and Colony
63(2)
The Challenge of Dissent
65(2)
War and Transition
67(1)
The English Civil War
67(1)
The Second Generation
68(2)
Indian Warfare
70(5)
3 The Emerging Empire, 1676--1756
75(36)
Rivals for America
77(1)
Spain and New Spain
77(3)
The Dutch and New Netherland
80(2)
New France and the "Middle Ground"
82(2)
Caribbean Sugar Colonies
84(2)
Restoration Colonies
86(1)
The Two Carolinas
86(2)
New Netherland Becomes New York
88(1)
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware
89(3)
Charity and Georgia
92(1)
The Operations of Empire
93(1)
Mercantilism and Trade
93(2)
James II and the Glorious Revolution
95(3)
The Glorious Revolution in America
98(2)
The Empire and the British Constitution
100(1)
Fighting the French and Indians
100(2)
The Eighteenth-Century British Constitution
102(2)
The Opposition Tradition
104(2)
Balanced Government in the Colonies
106(5)
4 Colonial Society and Culture, 1676--1756
111(36)
A Changing Population
113(1)
Immigrants from Europe
113(2)
The Expansion of Slavery
115(2)
Native Americans and Colonial Expansion
117(2)
The South as a Slave Society
119(1)
Life in Bondage
119(2)
Masters in a Slave Society
121(3)
The Backcountry South
124(1)
Life in the Middle Colonies
124(1)
Farms and Rural Life
125(2)
Towns and Cities
127(2)
Slaves and Free Blacks in the Northern Colonies
129(1)
Changes in New England
130(1)
The Tensions of Trade and Religion
130(2)
Witchcraft in Salem
132(2)
Social and Cultural Trends
134(1)
Free Women and Families
134(3)
Defining Race
137(2)
Rank and the Social Order
139(2)
Reason and the Enlightenment
141(2)
The Great Awakening
143(4)
5 The Era of Independence, 1756--1783
147(48)
Imperial War and Its Consequences
150(1)
The Seven Years' War
150(4)
Pontiac Rises
154(2)
A Standing Army and Revenue Reform
156(1)
Imperial Crisis
157(1)
Resisting the Stamp Act
158(2)
A Revolution from Below?
160(2)
Political Theory
162(2)
The Contagion of Liberty
164(1)
Protesting the Townshend Duties
165(1)
Rural Protests
166(2)
Daughters of Liberty
168(1)
The Rhetoric and Reality of Slavery
169(1)
The Conflict Escalates
170(1)
The Boston Tea Party and the Coercive Acts
171(1)
The First Continental Congress
172(2)
Lexington to Virginia
174(2)
Decision for Independence
176(1)
The Second Continental Congress
176(1)
Common Sense
177(2)
The Declaration of Independence
179(1)
Liberty, Equality, and Slavery
180(2)
The Military Challenge
182(1)
The Continental Army
182(1)
The British Dilemma
183(1)
The Loyalists
184(1)
The Course of War
184(1)
Fighting in the North
185(1)
Diplomacy and the Frontier
186(2)
War in the South
188(1)
The African Americans' War
189(2)
Victory and the Treaty of Paris
191(4)
6 A Federal Republic, 1783--1789
195(36)
Revolution and American Society
198(1)
Gentle and Simple
199(2)
Black and Free
201(2)
"Remember the Ladies"
203(2)
Indians and Freedom
205(1)
Devising Republican Government
206(1)
State Constitutions and Governments
207(2)
The Articles of Confederation
209(1)
Finances and Foreign Affairs
210(1)
Land Policies
211(3)
Conflict in the States
214(1)
Deference and Ambition
214(2)
Economic Controversies
216(1)
Upheaval in New England
217(1)
The Movement for a Stronger Union
218(1)
James Madison Comes Forward
219(1)
Delegates to the Federal Convention
220(1)
The Virginia Plan
220(2)
Slavery and Representation
222(1)
Three Balanced Branches
223(1)
The Ratification Debate
224(1)
Federalists and Antifederalists
225(2)
The Federalist Papers
227(2)
A Bill of Rights
229(2)
7 Federalists and Republicans, 1789--1815
231(44)
Launching the Federal Republic
234(1)
Creating Precedents
234(2)
Hamilton's Plans
236(1)
Madison's Response
237(3)
The First Party System
240(2)
Trials of Strength
242(1)
The French Revolution and American Diplomacy
243(1)
Western and Atlantic Challenges
244(2)
Washington's Farewell
246(2)
John Adams and Party Conflict
248(1)
The Quasi-War and Republican Dissent
248(1)
"The Revolution of 1800"
249(2)
The Jeffersonians in Power
251(1)
"We Are All Republicans, We Are All Federalists"
252(1)
A Changing Political Community
253(1)
The Power of the Courts
254(1)
Haiti and Louisiana
255(3)
The Trans-Appalachian West
258(1)
Whites and Indians beyond the Mountains
258(1)
The Process of Settlement
259(1)
The Great Revival
260(2)
A Second War for Independence?
262(1)
Commerce and Conflict
263(2)
Tecumseh and the Red Sticks
265(2)
The Road to War
267(2)
The Course of Combat
269(2)
Protests and Peace
271(4)
8 Market Revolution in the North, 1815--1860
275(36)
Technology and the New Economy
277(1)
The Household Economy
278(2)
The Transportation Revolution
280(2)
The Communication Revolution
282(1)
Public Support and Private Initiative
283(1)
The Role of Government
283(3)
Money and Banking
286(2)
Judicial Support
288(1)
Markets and Production
289(1)
Agricultural Improvements
289(2)
From Artisans to Operatives
291(2)
Textile Factories
293(1)
Early Mass Production
294(2)
Labor Protests
296(1)
On the Move
297(1)
Immigration
297(2)
Urbanization
299(1)
Moving West
300(2)
Society in the Free States
302(1)
Equality and Inequality
302(2)
The Burden of Race
304(1)
A New Middle Class
305(1)
The Home as Woman's Sphere
306(5)
9 Northern Culture and Reform, 1815--1860
311(40)
The Fate of the Republic
314(1)
The Postwar Mood
314(1)
Troubling Symptoms
315(2)
Revivals in the North
317(2)
Revivals and Reform
319(1)
New Denominations and Communities
319(2)
The Benevolent Empire
321(2)
Evangelical Reform
323(2)
Opposing and Defending Reform
325(2)
The Assault on Slavery
327(1)
Early Efforts
327(1)
Black Abolitionists
328(2)
Immediatism
330(1)
Antislavery Politics
331(1)
Women and Reform
332(1)
From Domesticity to the Public Sphere
332(1)
Antislavery Women
333(3)
Women's Rights
336(1)
Seneca Falls
337(1)
A Cultural Renaissance
338(1)
Rural and Urban Frontiers
339(2)
Romanticism
341(1)
Transcendentalism
342(2)
Darker Voices
344(1)
Democracy's Advocates
345(2)
The Free Labor Ideal
347(4)
10 The World of the South, 1815--1860
351(36)
Southern Contours
353(1)
The Upper South
353(2)
The Cotton Kingdom
355(2)
The Slave Economy
357(3)
The Peculiar Institution
360(1)
Working like a Slave
360(3)
Slave Families
363(1)
Slave Discipline
364(1)
Slave Resistance
365(2)
The South's Free Society
367(1)
The Masters
368(1)
The Mistresses
369(3)
Nonslaveholders and Poor Whites
372(1)
Free People of Color
373(1)
Slavery and Culture
374(1)
Race
374(2)
Religion
376(2)
Equality and Inequality
378(2)
Liberty, Honor, and Violence
380(1)
The Political Defense of Slavery
381(6)
11 The Transformation of Politics, 1815--1836
387(36)
An Era of Good Feelings?
389(1)
New Leaders, New Challenges
390(2)
Florida and the First Seminole War
392(1)
Panic and Its Remedies
393(2)
Conflict Returns
395(1)
Missouri Compromise and Monroe Doctrine
395(2)
The Election of 1824
397(2)
"The Spirit of Improvement"
399(1)
Jackson Takes Charge
400(1)
Reviving the Democratic Party
400(2)
The Spoils System
402(1)
Indian Removal
403(2)
Internal Improvements and Nullification
405(2)
War on the Bank
407(1)
The Monster
408(2)
Deposit Removal and the Party System
410(3)
The Aftermath
413(1)
Outside the Party Fold
414(1)
The "Blessed Spirit" of Anti-Masonry
415(1)
The Rise of the Workingmen
416(1)
Wrestling with Slavery
417(6)
12 Wars for the West, 1836--1850
423(34)
Democrats, Whigs, and the West
425(1)
Martin Van Buren and the Panic of 1837
425(3)
"Tippecanoe and Tyler Too"
428(2)
The Emergence of Manifest Destiny
430(1)
The Great West
431(1)
Geography and Early Peoples
432(1)
First Colonies
433(3)
The Arrival of Anglo-Americans
436(2)
Independent Texas
438(1)
War with Mexico
439(1)
Texas Annexation
439(2)
Polk Takes Charge
441(1)
Fighting Mexico
442(4)
The Poisoned Fruits of Manifest Destiny
446(1)
The Wilmot Proviso Controversy
447(2)
The Election of 1848
449(1)
Deadlock Follows Peace
450(2)
Contending Responses
452(3)
The Compromise of 1850
455(2)
13 The House Dividing, 1850--1861
457(36)
Old Parties Decline
459(1)
The Fugitive Slave Act
460(2)
The Election of 1852
462(1)
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
463(2)
New Parties Arise
465(1)
Immigrants and Know-Nothings
465(2)
The Republican Challenge
467(2)
The Fire-Eaters Respond
469(1)
"Bleeding Kansas"
470(2)
Republicans Reach for the Presidency
472(2)
Buchanan's Frustrations
474(1)
The Case of Dred Scott
474(2)
Back to Kansas
476(1)
The Failure of Distractions
477(3)
Disunion Approaches
480(1)
Rival Sectional Visions
480(1)
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
481(2)
John Brown's Raid
483(2)
The Election of 1860
485(3)
Secession Winter, 1860--1861
488(5)
14 "A New Birth of Freedom," 1861--1865
493(38)
"And the War Came ..."
495(1)
Lincoln's Inauguration
495(3)
Fort Sumter and the Rush to War
498(2)
Fighting Begins
500(1)
Resources for Combat
500(3)
Geography, Strategy, and Diplomacy
503(1)
Bull Run
504(2)
McClellan in Charge
506(1)
The War on Slavery
507(1)
Union Dissent
508(1)
The Contrabands Move
509(1)
Proclaiming Emancipation
510(2)
The Home Fires Burning
512(1)
The Economy of Victory
513(2)
The Confederate Home Front
515(3)
Confederate Dissent
518(1)
Union-Held Dixie
519(3)
"This Mighty Scourge of War"
522(1)
"Grant Is My Man"
523(3)
The Tide Slowly Turns
526(1)
"To Finish the Work We Are In"
527(4)
15 Reconstructing the Republic, 1865--1877
531(40)
Binding Up the Nation's Wounds
534(1)
Freedom and Destruction
534(3)
Planning for Reconstruction
537(3)
Land and Labor
540(2)
Family, School, and Church
542(2)
Andrew Johnson's Approach
544(1)
The Tennessee Unionist
544(1)
Johnson's Policies
545(2)
Republicans React
547(1)
Congress Takes Charge
548(1)
The Fourteenth Amendment
549(1)
The Reconstruction Acts
550(1)
The Impeachment and Trial of Andrew Johnson
551(1)
Reconstruction and Resistance
552(1)
The Republican Experiment in the States
552(3)
White Violence and the Ku Klux Klan
555(1)
The Fifteenth Amendment
556(3)
Constructing the West
559(1)
War in the West
559(2)
New Settlers
561(2)
Race and Government
563(1)
Redeemers Triumphant
564(1)
"Grantism"
564(1)
Wavering Republicans
565(3)
The Compromise of 1877
568(3)
Acknowledgments 571(2)
For Further Reading 573(12)
Index 585
Harry L. Watson is the Atlanta Distinguished Professor of Southern Culture at the University of North Carolina. He is the author of Liberty and Power: The Politics of Jacksonian America and An Independent People: The Way We Lived in North Carolina, 1770-1820. His coedited books include Southern Cultures: The Fifteenth Anniversary Reader and The American South in a Global World. Jane Dailey is associate professor of American history at the University of Chicago. She is the author of Before Jim Crow: The Politics of Race in Post-Emancipation Virginia and Jim Crow America: A Norton Casebook in History and the coeditor of Jumpin' Jim Crow: Southern Politics from Civil War to Civil Rights.