Notes on the contributors viii
Introduction xiii
Stephen J. Whitfield
PART I: TIME-FRAMES
1 1900 - 1914 3
Eugene E. Leach
2 1914 - 1929 19
Glen Gendzel
3 1929 - 1941 36
Michael E. Parrish
4 1941 - 1950 54
Allan M. Winkler
5 1950 - 1960 71
Richard M. Fried
6 1960 - 1974 87
Jama Lazerow
7 1974 - 1988 102
Leo P. Ribuffo
8 1988 - 2000 123
Steven M. Gillon
PART II: PLACES
9 The South 141
Raymond Arsenault
10 The West 163
Anne M. Butler
11 The Environment 179
Paul S. Sutter
12 The City 198
Jon C. Teaford
PART III: PEOPLE
13 Immigration 215
Roger Daniels
14 Ethnicity 233
Hasia R. Diner
15 Labor 249
Joseph A. McCartin
16 Race 266
Reed Ueda
17 Women 283
June Sochen
PART IV: THE POLITY AND THE ECONOMY
18 The Military 301
Jerry Cooper
19 Foreign Policy 317
Justus D. Doenecke
20 Consumption 336
Charles McGovern
21 Law 358
Norman L. Rosenberg
22 Business 377
David B. Sicilia
PART V: IMAGES AND "ISMS"
23 Journalism and Broadcasting 397
James L. Baughman
24 Religion 413
Charles H. Lippy
25 Ideas 430
Wilfred M. McClay
26 Science and Technology 449
Carroll Pursell
27 Conservatism 462
Edward S. Shapiro
28 Liberalism 478
Hans Vorlander
29 The Visual Arts 493
Douglas Tallack
Bibliography 510
Index 557
Stephen J. Whitfield is Professor of American Studies at Brandeis University where he holds the Max Richter Chair in American Civilization. Among other works, he is the author of Into the Dark: Hannah Arendt and Totalitarianism (1980), A Death in the Delta: The Story of Emmett Till (1988), and The Culture of the Cold War (1991, 1996). He has published widely in modern political and intellectual history, and particularly in American Jewish history.
"This superb book is a treasure and a delight. Penetrating
interpretive essays by almost thirty distinguished historians offer
thoughtful perspectives on a turbulent century that brought
sweeping changes to the United States even as the nation surged to
global dominance. A Companion to 20th-century America is essential
reading for anyone seeking to understand the forces that have
shaped contemporary America."
—Paul S. Boyer, University of Wisconsin-Madison "This is an
important contribution to our understanding of modern American
history, with illuminating contributions by many first-rate
American historians."
—Richard Pells, University of Texas-Austin "An indispensable book
for anyone who wants to learn what America's best historians have
written about the American century and its critics. The breadth of
topics is dazzling, and fresh insights appear on nearly every
page."
—Michael Kazin, Georgetown University
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