Politics and Progress: American Society and the State since 1865

Politics and Progress: American Society and the State since 1865

Politics and Progress: American Society and the State since 1865

Politics and Progress: American Society and the State since 1865

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Overview

This study focuses on the state's impact on American society from the Civil War to the present. For the past several decades historians have tended to divide themselves into increasingly distinct historical perspectives. This anthology seeks to reverse that trend by linking the viewpoints of political and social historians to interpret the growth of the state and society in the United States since 1865, an era during which the state's role has been expanded and redefined in a diverse and rapidly modernizing America. This technique challenges historians to think more broadly about the interactions between the state and society.

Arguing that the close examination of political frameworks offers significant insights into facets of social history, these chapters seek to connect social and political history through a common thread of human experience. Pieces are grouped thematically and chronologically to illustrate how the state's role in society has developed over time. The first six examine the state's influence on, and manipulation by, social groups, particularly women, Native Americans, labor, and the military. The final three demonstrate the impact of political and social thought on the relationship between the state and society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275971328
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/30/2001
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

ANDREW E. KERSTEN is an Assistant Professor of United States History and Humanities at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay./e He teaches classes in U.S. Immigration History, U.S. Economic and Business History, and the Age of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Kersten's current research interests center on the American Federation of Labor during World War II.

KRISTE LINDENMEYER is an Associate Professor of United States History at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County./e She teaches classes in U.S. social and political history. Her current research examines children and youth in 1930s America.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Introduction
The State and Social Groups
Much More than an Outpost: The Military Post in the Trans-Mississippi West by Frank N. Schubert
For Adults Only: The Anti-Child Marriage Campaign and Its Legacy by Kriste Lindenmeyer
The Negro Service Committee and African-American Soldiers by Nina Mjagkij
Fighting for Indian Artisans: John Collier, René d'Harnoncourt, and the Indian Arts and Crafts Board by Susan Labry Meyn
Joseph A. Padway and the Open Shop Movement During World War II by Andrew E. Kersten
Politics, Patriotism, and the State: The Fight Over the Soldier Vote, 1942-1944 by Michael Anderson
The State and Political Imagination
Eyes on a Different Prize: Ferderal Oversight of Civil Rights Memory, 1939-1967 by Richard A. Reiman
April 12, 1945: The Other Day That Lives in Infamy by Robert E. Miller
The American Centrifuge: Ethnicity in the United States at the End of the Century by Rudolph J. Vecoli

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