These United States: The Questions of Our Past, Concise Edition, Volume 1, 4th edition
Published by Pearson (February 8, 2010) © 2011
- Irwin Unger New York University, Emeritus
- Robert R. Tomes
- Hardcover, paperback or looseleaf edition
- Affordable rental option for select titles
For introductory-level survey courses in American History.
Using a thematic approach, this concise survey explores the many and varied threads of American history-social, intellectual, cultural, political, diplomatic, economic, and military-from the arrival of the first native American inhabitants thousand of years ago throught the historic 2008 election and the new administration of Barack Obama.
A thematic approach, with chapters each organized around a significant question — designed to challenge students with the complexity, and often ambiguity, of the past and to compel them to evaluate critically different points of view — makes the learning of history a quest, and exploration, rather than a mere absorption of facts.
Multidisciplinary perspectives - reaches beyond discussions of political, diplomatic, and military events to include in-depth considerations of social, cultural, and economic matters — aims to broaden the horizon of students by showing them that history is so much more than they expected.
A focus on the enormous diversity of the American people- Expands the canon to include those who have traditionally been excluded from the Americn past and seeks to embrace the enormous diversity of the American people. The reader will find inThese United States the experiences of women as well as men; people of color, native Americans, as well as those of European extraction; youths as well as adults; the poor as well as the rich; artists, writers and musicians as well as politicians and diplomats.
“Everyday life” in America — describes how ordinary people got through the day, the week, the year in certain points in history — exposes students to the customs, behavior, ways of life, work, and play of the predecessors so that they can see their own daily life in broader perspective.
- New sections on various aspects of social history, particularly on slavery, on the Salem witch trials, and on daily life.
- Extends the story through the events of the 2008 presidential campaign. (Volume 2)
- Discusses the onset of the post-2007 recession. (Volume 2)
- Examines the first six months of the new administration of Barack Obama., including its efforts to check the economic decline and to reverse the direction of the Bush administration on issues of health care, the environment and America’s relations with the rest of the world. (Volume 2)
BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS
1 THE NEW WORLD ENCOUNTERS THE OLD
2 THE OLD WORLD COMES TO AMERICA
3 COLONIAL SOCIETY
4 MOVING TOWARD INDEPENDENCE
5 THE REVOLUTION
6 THE ORIGINS OF THE CONSTITUTION
7 THE FIRST PARTY SYSTEM
8 THE JEFFERSONIANS IN OFFICE
9 THE AMERICAN ECONOMIC MIRACLE
10 JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY
11 THE MEXICAN WAR AND EXPANSIONISM
12 AMERICANS BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR
13 THE OLD SOUTH
14 THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR
15 THE CIVIL WAR
16 RECONSTRUCTION
APPENDIX
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
INDEX
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Pulitzer Prize winning historian Irwin Unger has been teaching American history for over forty years on both coasts. Born and largely educated in New York, he has lived in California, Virginia, and Washington State. He is married to Debi Unger and they have five children, now all safely past their college years. Professor Unger formerly taught at California State University at Long Beach, the University of California at Davis, and New York University. He is now professor emeritus at NYU.
Professor Unger’s professional interests have ranged widely within American history. He has written on Reconstruction, the Progressive Era, and on the 1960s. His first book, The Greenback Era, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1965. Since then he has written The Movement: The New Left and (with Debi Unger) The Vulnerable Years, Turning Point: 1968, The Best of Intentions (about the Great Society), LBJ: A Life, The Guggenheims, A Family History. He has just completed a book on the 1960s and he and Debi Unger are working on a biography of General George C. Marshall.Need help? Get in touch