Volume 3 in the Penguin History of the United States, edited by Eric Foner.
Steven Hahn is a professor of history at New York University. His previous work of history, A Nation Under Our Feet, received the Pulitzer Prize in History (2004), the Bancroft Prize in History (2004), and the Merle Curti Prize in Social History (2004), and was a finalist for the Lincoln Prize and Frederick Douglass Prize. His other books include The Political Roots of Slavery and Freedom and The Roots of Southern Populism. He formerly taught at the University of Pennsylvania.
“A massive and masterly account of America’s political and economic
transformation between 1830 and 1910 . . . Hahn describes his book
as telling ‘a familiar story in an unfamiliar way.’ It is much more
than that. Attempting a synthesis of a century’s worth of American
history is a daunting task. Writing one as provocative and learned
. . . as this one is a triumph, nothing less.”—David Oshinsky, The
Washington Post
“Rarely has there been a more forthright challenge to old
stereotypes than in Steven Hahn’s A Nation Without Borders, his
distinguished volume in the Penguin History of the United States on
the period 1830-1910 . . . rich in insight on the making of the US
during a crucial period.”—Peter Clarke, Financial Times
“Vivid detail . . . A Nation Without Borders is a detailed,
dense . . . His chronicle is breathtaking in its scope and
brilliant in its subtle and original conceptualization of the
nation during this period. It is often affecting, too, especially
in its descriptions of labor activism . . . There is a cautionary
tale here for our own time.”—John Stauffer, The Wall Street
Journal
“In his comprehensive A Nation Without Borders, Hahn . . . provides
the most sweeping indictment to date of the American appetite for
conquest.”— The New York Times Book Review
"Capacious [and] buzzing with ideas."—The Boston Globe
“Brisk and thought-provoking . . . Readable and illuminating,
and Hahn's thesis will lead many writers, students, and history
buffs to rethink what they have learned from a new
perspective.”—The Weekly Standard
“This breathtakingly original ‘history of the United States’—which
begins and ends in Mexico, naturally—strikes like lightning. It
illuminates the complex sweep of forces that came together in the
decades surrounding the Civil War to forge the American nation.
Only Hahn could have written such a revelatory book.” —Junot
Diaz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of
Oscar Wao
"This magisterial and authoritative monograph is a must-read for
anyone interested in U.S. history." —Library Journal (starred
review)
"A compelling examination of the long, divisive road to America's
emergence, in 1919, as 'the most formidable power in the world.'"
—Kirkus
“Given Hahn’s unimpeachable body of knowledge, readers can be
confident that they’re getting the most current understanding of
the history of the U.S….bears reading by all serious students of
the American past.” —Publishers Weekly
“A bold reinterpretation of the American nineteenth century, this
tour de force bristles with fresh insights gained from often
surprising vantage points... It confirms Hahn’s
position as one of the most important interpreters of the American
experience. A must read for anyone interested in the history of the
United States.” —Sven Beckert, author of Empire of Cotton
“Steven Hahn has given us an ambitious and marvelously grounded
rethinking of our history during eighty of its most turbulent,
violent and creative years. It challenges some of our most
fundamental predilections and reimagines how the nation we know
came to be. It is guaranteed to rearrange your mental
furniture.” —Elliott West, author of The Contested Plains
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