Required Texts
Most readings for this class will be distributed through the website. In addition, there are a few required texts for purchase. They should all be available inexpensively online new or used.
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DuBois The Souls of Black Folk.
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Bellamy Looking Backward.
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Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management.
- Eric Foner, Give Me Liberty, Fourth Edition Volume 2 (Seagull edition)
- The third edition is a out of print, but only a few years old and available online used for only around $10-$15. If you wish to read it instead, you may: but you are responsible for figuring out which sections correspond to the page numbers. But be sure to buy a copy that includes both “Volume 2” and “Seagull” in the title.
Unit 1: Nation building. (1876-1896)
Week 1: Introductions and the Civil War
The Legacy of the Civil War.
- Thursday discussion: James “The Moral Equivalent of War.”
Week 2: The North and Industrialization
Andrew Carnegie
- Foner, 592-602 (“The Second Industrial Revolution”)
- Foner, 616-626 (“Politics in a Gilded Age”)
Thursday Discussion:
- Carnegie “Wealth.”
- Spencer, “What Social Classes owe to each other”
Week 3: The West and the empire beyond
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Foner, 602-615 (“Transformation of the West”); 664-678 (“Becoming a World Power”)
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Thursday discussion: Turner “The Significance of the Frontier in American History.”
Week 4: The New South and the agricultural crisis
- Foner, 648-658 (“The Segregated South”); 637 – 648 (“The Populist Challenge”)
Jim Crow
Wilmington Riots
The Agrarian Crisis
In class: Populist Party Platform, 1896
- Thursday discussion: DuBois The Souls of Black Folk.
- Read Introduction, the Forethought, and chapters
- I (Of our Spriritual Strivings)
- III (Of Mr. Booker T. Washington)
- VI (Of the training of black men)
- VII (Of the black belt)
- VIII (Of the quest of the Golden Fleece)
- IX (Of the Sons of Master and Man)
- XIII (Of the coming of John)
- The Afterthought.
Week 5: The crisis of the 1890s
Monday: The Labor Crisis
- Foner, 626-634 (“Labor and the republic”)
Wednesday: The political crisis and the 1896 election
Thursday discussion: Hamlin Garland, “Under the Lion’s Paw”; Bellamy Looking Backward.
Midterm 1: Monday, October 6
Unit 2: Reconstitution (1896-1917)
Week 6: Mass Production and mass immigration
- Foner: 681-706 (“The Progressive Era”: Beginning up to but not including “The politics of Progressivism”)
- In class: Modern Times
- Thursday Discussion: Taylor The Principles of Scientific Management.; The Lochner Decision
Week 7: The progressive impulse and the constitutional shift
- No new Foner
- Morality, Christianity, and gender
- Thursday Discussion: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Solitude of Self; Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Women and Economics, chapter 4; Jane Addams, “The Subjective Necessity for Social Settlements” (from *Twenty Years at Hull House, 1910)
Week 8: Progressivism Triumphant
- Foner: 706-724 (“The politics of Progressivism” through the chapter’s end).
- Thursday discussion:
- Roosevelt, speech at Osawatomie, Kansas, 1910
- Wilson, “Monopoly or Opportunity,” from The New Freedom, 1912.
- Lippman, Drift and Mastery, 1914, pp. 27-65.
Week 9: The War abroad and at home
- Foner: 726-767 (“Safe for Democracy: The United States and World War I” full chapter)
- Thursday Discussion: Randolph Bourne, Twilight of the Idols and Trans-national America
Midterm 2: Monday, November 3
Unit 3: Mass America
Week 10. Living Like Americans
- Foner, 768-798 (“From Business Culture to Great Depression”, up to but not including “The Great Depression”)
- Lynd, Middletown, intro and selections from “Using Leisure”
- Pick, listen to, and describe for a reading response (if needed) one of the radio programs at the Internet Archive
Week 11. Reacting against Modernity
The Scopes trial, the 1924 Immigration restriction
- In class: *Birth of a Nation (1915)
- Thursday discussion: Felix Frankfurter on Sacco and Vanzetti
Week 12: The Great Depression
- Foner, 798-818. (End of the Great Depression chapter and beginning of the New Deal chapter through “The first New Deal,” not including “The grassroots revolt”).
- Thursday reading: TBD
Week 13: The New Deal
- Foner, 819-849 (Through the end of the new Chapter)
Roosevelt and the First New Deal
Labor, popular unrest, and the second New Deal
- Thursday discussion: AA Berle and Herbert Hoover on the New Deal.
Week 14: The War
- Foner, 850-892 (“Fighting for the Four Freedoms”)
- Dorothea Lange, photographs.
Abroad
At home
Final date TBD.
Bellamy, Edward. Looking Backward. New York: Dover Publications, 1996.
Carnegie, Andrew. “Wealth.” North American Review 148, no. 391 (June 1889): 653–665.
DuBois, W. E. B. The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches. Chicago: A.C. McClurg & Co, 1903.
James, William. “The Moral Equivalent of War.” Popular Science, October 1910.
Taylor, Frederick Winslow. The Principles of Scientific Management. New York: Cosimo, 2006.
Turner, Frederick Jackson. “The Significance of the Frontier in American History.” In Annual Report of the American Historical Association, 1893, 197–228. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1894. http://archive.org/details/1893annualreport00ameruoft.