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Paperback Liberty, Equality, Power: A History of the American People, Volume II: Since 1863 [With Infotrac] Book

ISBN: 0534169414

ISBN13: 9780534169411

Liberty, Equality, Power: A History of the American People, Volume II: Since 1863 [With Infotrac]

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

This best-selling introductory American history survey text provides students with a clear understanding of how power is gained, lost, and used in both public and private life. Central to this text are the themes of liberty, equality, and power, as well as the shifting relationships and tensions between these evolving concepts. The authors use these themes to convey the complex reality and diversity of America's history.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A real gem to any history reference library

How can a book that is co-authored by James McPherson be bad? This book is a gem! Filled with archived paintings, political cartoons, maps and even sections on "History Through Film, Music Art", readers quickly realize that they aren't reading just boring political history as seen by the dominant Anglo society, but a social and cultural history of the United States; while politicians are politicking, common people are creating literature, music and art. Everything comes together in these chapters. With this book come accessories via the internet. Primary sources can be easily opened from other domains to help the reader with critical thinking. This is a great college-level history book. Events are brought together to make a history student realize how events of the last century still apply today. Focusing on events that show their significance and subsequent results to other events is what learning about history is about, it's not just memorizing tables and facts and dates. The following is an excerpt on a section called Ethnicity, Religion and the Schools: The argument between Whig centralism and Democratic localism dominated the debate over public education until the children of Irish and German Catholic immigrants entered schools by the thousands in the mid 1840s. Most immigrant families were poor and relied on their children's earned income. Consequently, the children's attendance at school was irregular at best. Most immigrants were Catholics. The Irish regarded Protestant prayers and the King James Bible as heresies. Some of the textbooks were worse. Olney's Practical System of Modern Geography , a standard textbook, declared that "The Irish in general are quick of apprehension, active, brave and hospitable, but passionate, ignorant, vain and superstitious." Many Catholic parents refused to send their children to school. Others demanded changes in textbooks, the elimination of the King James Bible, tax-supported Catholic schools, or at least tax relief for parents who sent their children to parish schools. Whigs, joined by many native-born Democrats, saw Catholic complaints as popish assaults on the Protestantism that they insisted was at the heart of American republicanism. Many school districts, particularly in the rural areas to which many Scandinavian and German immigrants found their way, created foreign-language schools and provided bilingual instruction. In other places, state support for church-run schools persisted. But in northeastern cities, where immigrant Catholics often formed militant local majorities, demands for state support led to violence and to organized nativist (anti-immigrant) politics. In 1844 the Native American Party, with the endorsement of the Whigs, won the New York City elections. That same year in Philadelphia, riots that pitted avowedly Whig Protestants against Catholic immigrants, ostensibly over the issue of Bible reading in schools, killed 13 people. (291/292) The book's only do

Liberty, Equality, and Power

It was great. Easy to read, I learned a lot. I would recommend to anyone.

Excellent Text

I have been using this text in my American history survey's at a major university for about the last four years. I chose it in the first place because, unlike most of the other texts I have received for consideration, its focus is more upon information than interpretation. Moreover, it avoids the kind of pc bs one finds so pervasive in academia today i.e. it does its best to be objective, does not begin with the premise that the United States is an evil empire, and does not enter into the fantasy that anyone other than a a bunch of dead white guys were primarily responsbile for the creation of this country, its evolution, and its institution. This is the ideal text for someone who wants to text history as an account of the past; it is a poor textbook for someone who wishes to teach history as a vehicle of their far left agenda.

AP class

In reference to the other reviewers, the complaints here don't seem to address the actual content of the book - $95 is expensive for a paperback, but that's why the same book can be found for $20 under Used & New. ANYWAY, I'm a high school student who ordered this for use in my AP United States History course this fall. The book is clearly laid out, the prose is engaging, and the parts that I have read so far are comparable to(and in some instances this one surpasses) Alan Brinkley's "American History: A Survey", which is ranked far better. I'll probably drop another review next year after the AP exam, but it seems to be clear and concise, and the resources on the CD-rom are invaluable.
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