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In The American South: A History, Fifth Edition, William J. Cooper, Jr. and Thomas E. Terrill demonstrate their belief that it is impossible to divorce the history of the South from the history of the United States. The authors' analysis underscores the complex interaction between the South as a distinct region and the South as an inescapable part of America. Cooper and Terrill show how the resulting tension has often propelled section and nation toward collision. In supporting their thesis, the authors draw on the tremendous amount of profoundly new scholarship in Southern history. Each…mehr
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In The American South: A History, Fifth Edition, William J. Cooper, Jr. and Thomas E. Terrill demonstrate their belief that it is impossible to divorce the history of the South from the history of the United States. The authors' analysis underscores the complex interaction between the South as a distinct region and the South as an inescapable part of America. Cooper and Terrill show how the resulting tension has often propelled section and nation toward collision. In supporting their thesis, the authors draw on the tremendous amount of profoundly new scholarship in Southern history. Each volume includes a substantial bibliographical essay-completely updated for this edition-which provides the reader with a guide to literature on the history of the South. This volume contains updated chapters, and tables.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Fifth Edition
- Seitenzahl: 598
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 895g
- ISBN-13: 9781442262317
- ISBN-10: 1442262311
- Artikelnr.: 45641878
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Fifth Edition
- Seitenzahl: 598
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 895g
- ISBN-13: 9781442262317
- ISBN-10: 1442262311
- Artikelnr.: 45641878
William J. Cooper, Jr. is Boyd professor of History at Louisiana State University. Thomas E. Terrill is emeritus professor of History at the University of South Carolina. Christopher Childers is assistant professor of History at Pittsburg State University.
Preface Prologue: The Enduring South List of Maps Chapter 16. After the War Reconstruction
Presidential Reconstruction
Southern Defiance: Unconquered Rebels?
The Republicans and Johnson's Reconstruction Policies
The 1866 Election and the Fourteenth Amendment
Reconstruction: Myth and Reality
The Emergence of the One-Party South
The Compromise of 1877 Chapter 17. Economic Reconstruction, 1865-1880 Landlords, Sharecroppers, and Tenants
Blacks and the Limits to Freedom
"Furnish," Crop Liens, and Country Merchants
Money and Interest
Puppet Monarch
Southern Railways
Bankruptcy, Consolidation, and Regulation
Cities, Towns, and Industry Chapter 18. The Redeemers and the New South, 1865-1890 The New South Creed
The Lost Cause
A Woman of the New South
Political Independents Challenge the Redeemers
Republicans and Democrats in Virginia
The Solid South
Southern Democrats and Blacks
The Solid South and National Politics
The Blair Bill
The Legacy of the Redeemers Chapter 19. A Different South Emerges: Rails, Mills, and Towns Railroad Empires
Industry in the New South
Forest Products
Metals and Minerals
Processed Farm Products
Tobacco Manufacturing
Cotton Manufacturing
Urbanization in the New South
A Different South: At the Turn of the Century Chapter 20. The South and the Crisis of the 1890s The Depression of the 1890s
Prelude to the Alliance Movement
The Alliance Movement: Texas Roots
The Alliance in Politics
The Mississippi Plan
The Populists
Political Upheaval
The Populist Legacy
Disfranchisement: Jim Crow and Southern Politics
The Foundation Resecured Chapter 21. Jim Crow: Black and White South The Atlanta Compromise
Jim Crow
Why Jim Crow?
The Black World
Industrial Workers in the New South
Unions and Unionization in the New South
New Divisions among Protestants
Political Demagogues Chapter 22. Southern Progressives Four Southern Progressives
Progressivism, Southern Style
The Roots of Southern Progressivism
Educational Reform
Health Reforms
Child Labor Reform
Southern Ladies
Prohibition: The Noble Experiment Chapter 23. Restoration and Exile, 1912-1929 The Wilson Administration
A Disrupted Society: The South during World War I
Good Times: The Southern Economy and World War I
Southern Appalachia
The Town World
Business Progressivism and State Government
The Ku Klux Klan Reborn
The Black World
The World of the Farm
The End of the Decade Chapter 24. Religion and Culture in the New South The Scopes Trial
The Religious Heritage of the Twentieth-Century South
Culture in the Postbellum South
The War Within
The Southern Literary Renaissance
Southern Regionalism in the 1920s and 1930s
Gone with the Wind Map Essay: The Changing South: People and Cotton Chapter 25. The Emergence of the Modern South, 1930-1945 The Depression and the South
In the Democratic Majority
The New Deal and Southern Agriculture
The New Deal and Southern Industry
Cracks in the Solid South
Jim Crow: An Uncertain Future
World War II Chapter 26. The End of Jim Crow: The Civil Rights Revolution Jim Crow and the Truman Administration
The Supreme Court and "Separate but Equal"
Brown: Massive Resistance, Calculated Evasion
Public School Desegregation: Little Rock and New Orleans
The Civil Rights Movement
The Kennedy Administration and Civil Rights
Birmingham and the March on Washington
The Voting Rights Act
The Evening News and "History"
Public School Desegregation and the End of "Freedom of Choice" Chapter 27. The Modern South Wallace and National Politics
The Rise of the Southern Republicans
The Collapse of the Solid South
The Republican Party Secures Its Place in Dixie
The Transformation of the Southern Democrats
The Sunbelt
"Cotton Fields No More"
The Metropolitan South Chapter 28. The Sunbelt South: No Eden in Dixie The Vanishing South?
Two Religions: North and South?
Other Faiths: Southern Literature, Football, and Elvis
Persistent Divisions: Black and White Biographies Bibliographical Essay Index About the Authors
Presidential Reconstruction
Southern Defiance: Unconquered Rebels?
The Republicans and Johnson's Reconstruction Policies
The 1866 Election and the Fourteenth Amendment
Reconstruction: Myth and Reality
The Emergence of the One-Party South
The Compromise of 1877 Chapter 17. Economic Reconstruction, 1865-1880 Landlords, Sharecroppers, and Tenants
Blacks and the Limits to Freedom
"Furnish," Crop Liens, and Country Merchants
Money and Interest
Puppet Monarch
Southern Railways
Bankruptcy, Consolidation, and Regulation
Cities, Towns, and Industry Chapter 18. The Redeemers and the New South, 1865-1890 The New South Creed
The Lost Cause
A Woman of the New South
Political Independents Challenge the Redeemers
Republicans and Democrats in Virginia
The Solid South
Southern Democrats and Blacks
The Solid South and National Politics
The Blair Bill
The Legacy of the Redeemers Chapter 19. A Different South Emerges: Rails, Mills, and Towns Railroad Empires
Industry in the New South
Forest Products
Metals and Minerals
Processed Farm Products
Tobacco Manufacturing
Cotton Manufacturing
Urbanization in the New South
A Different South: At the Turn of the Century Chapter 20. The South and the Crisis of the 1890s The Depression of the 1890s
Prelude to the Alliance Movement
The Alliance Movement: Texas Roots
The Alliance in Politics
The Mississippi Plan
The Populists
Political Upheaval
The Populist Legacy
Disfranchisement: Jim Crow and Southern Politics
The Foundation Resecured Chapter 21. Jim Crow: Black and White South The Atlanta Compromise
Jim Crow
Why Jim Crow?
The Black World
Industrial Workers in the New South
Unions and Unionization in the New South
New Divisions among Protestants
Political Demagogues Chapter 22. Southern Progressives Four Southern Progressives
Progressivism, Southern Style
The Roots of Southern Progressivism
Educational Reform
Health Reforms
Child Labor Reform
Southern Ladies
Prohibition: The Noble Experiment Chapter 23. Restoration and Exile, 1912-1929 The Wilson Administration
A Disrupted Society: The South during World War I
Good Times: The Southern Economy and World War I
Southern Appalachia
The Town World
Business Progressivism and State Government
The Ku Klux Klan Reborn
The Black World
The World of the Farm
The End of the Decade Chapter 24. Religion and Culture in the New South The Scopes Trial
The Religious Heritage of the Twentieth-Century South
Culture in the Postbellum South
The War Within
The Southern Literary Renaissance
Southern Regionalism in the 1920s and 1930s
Gone with the Wind Map Essay: The Changing South: People and Cotton Chapter 25. The Emergence of the Modern South, 1930-1945 The Depression and the South
In the Democratic Majority
The New Deal and Southern Agriculture
The New Deal and Southern Industry
Cracks in the Solid South
Jim Crow: An Uncertain Future
World War II Chapter 26. The End of Jim Crow: The Civil Rights Revolution Jim Crow and the Truman Administration
The Supreme Court and "Separate but Equal"
Brown: Massive Resistance, Calculated Evasion
Public School Desegregation: Little Rock and New Orleans
The Civil Rights Movement
The Kennedy Administration and Civil Rights
Birmingham and the March on Washington
The Voting Rights Act
The Evening News and "History"
Public School Desegregation and the End of "Freedom of Choice" Chapter 27. The Modern South Wallace and National Politics
The Rise of the Southern Republicans
The Collapse of the Solid South
The Republican Party Secures Its Place in Dixie
The Transformation of the Southern Democrats
The Sunbelt
"Cotton Fields No More"
The Metropolitan South Chapter 28. The Sunbelt South: No Eden in Dixie The Vanishing South?
Two Religions: North and South?
Other Faiths: Southern Literature, Football, and Elvis
Persistent Divisions: Black and White Biographies Bibliographical Essay Index About the Authors
Preface Prologue: The Enduring South List of Maps Chapter 16. After the War Reconstruction
Presidential Reconstruction
Southern Defiance: Unconquered Rebels?
The Republicans and Johnson's Reconstruction Policies
The 1866 Election and the Fourteenth Amendment
Reconstruction: Myth and Reality
The Emergence of the One-Party South
The Compromise of 1877 Chapter 17. Economic Reconstruction, 1865-1880 Landlords, Sharecroppers, and Tenants
Blacks and the Limits to Freedom
"Furnish," Crop Liens, and Country Merchants
Money and Interest
Puppet Monarch
Southern Railways
Bankruptcy, Consolidation, and Regulation
Cities, Towns, and Industry Chapter 18. The Redeemers and the New South, 1865-1890 The New South Creed
The Lost Cause
A Woman of the New South
Political Independents Challenge the Redeemers
Republicans and Democrats in Virginia
The Solid South
Southern Democrats and Blacks
The Solid South and National Politics
The Blair Bill
The Legacy of the Redeemers Chapter 19. A Different South Emerges: Rails, Mills, and Towns Railroad Empires
Industry in the New South
Forest Products
Metals and Minerals
Processed Farm Products
Tobacco Manufacturing
Cotton Manufacturing
Urbanization in the New South
A Different South: At the Turn of the Century Chapter 20. The South and the Crisis of the 1890s The Depression of the 1890s
Prelude to the Alliance Movement
The Alliance Movement: Texas Roots
The Alliance in Politics
The Mississippi Plan
The Populists
Political Upheaval
The Populist Legacy
Disfranchisement: Jim Crow and Southern Politics
The Foundation Resecured Chapter 21. Jim Crow: Black and White South The Atlanta Compromise
Jim Crow
Why Jim Crow?
The Black World
Industrial Workers in the New South
Unions and Unionization in the New South
New Divisions among Protestants
Political Demagogues Chapter 22. Southern Progressives Four Southern Progressives
Progressivism, Southern Style
The Roots of Southern Progressivism
Educational Reform
Health Reforms
Child Labor Reform
Southern Ladies
Prohibition: The Noble Experiment Chapter 23. Restoration and Exile, 1912-1929 The Wilson Administration
A Disrupted Society: The South during World War I
Good Times: The Southern Economy and World War I
Southern Appalachia
The Town World
Business Progressivism and State Government
The Ku Klux Klan Reborn
The Black World
The World of the Farm
The End of the Decade Chapter 24. Religion and Culture in the New South The Scopes Trial
The Religious Heritage of the Twentieth-Century South
Culture in the Postbellum South
The War Within
The Southern Literary Renaissance
Southern Regionalism in the 1920s and 1930s
Gone with the Wind Map Essay: The Changing South: People and Cotton Chapter 25. The Emergence of the Modern South, 1930-1945 The Depression and the South
In the Democratic Majority
The New Deal and Southern Agriculture
The New Deal and Southern Industry
Cracks in the Solid South
Jim Crow: An Uncertain Future
World War II Chapter 26. The End of Jim Crow: The Civil Rights Revolution Jim Crow and the Truman Administration
The Supreme Court and "Separate but Equal"
Brown: Massive Resistance, Calculated Evasion
Public School Desegregation: Little Rock and New Orleans
The Civil Rights Movement
The Kennedy Administration and Civil Rights
Birmingham and the March on Washington
The Voting Rights Act
The Evening News and "History"
Public School Desegregation and the End of "Freedom of Choice" Chapter 27. The Modern South Wallace and National Politics
The Rise of the Southern Republicans
The Collapse of the Solid South
The Republican Party Secures Its Place in Dixie
The Transformation of the Southern Democrats
The Sunbelt
"Cotton Fields No More"
The Metropolitan South Chapter 28. The Sunbelt South: No Eden in Dixie The Vanishing South?
Two Religions: North and South?
Other Faiths: Southern Literature, Football, and Elvis
Persistent Divisions: Black and White Biographies Bibliographical Essay Index About the Authors
Presidential Reconstruction
Southern Defiance: Unconquered Rebels?
The Republicans and Johnson's Reconstruction Policies
The 1866 Election and the Fourteenth Amendment
Reconstruction: Myth and Reality
The Emergence of the One-Party South
The Compromise of 1877 Chapter 17. Economic Reconstruction, 1865-1880 Landlords, Sharecroppers, and Tenants
Blacks and the Limits to Freedom
"Furnish," Crop Liens, and Country Merchants
Money and Interest
Puppet Monarch
Southern Railways
Bankruptcy, Consolidation, and Regulation
Cities, Towns, and Industry Chapter 18. The Redeemers and the New South, 1865-1890 The New South Creed
The Lost Cause
A Woman of the New South
Political Independents Challenge the Redeemers
Republicans and Democrats in Virginia
The Solid South
Southern Democrats and Blacks
The Solid South and National Politics
The Blair Bill
The Legacy of the Redeemers Chapter 19. A Different South Emerges: Rails, Mills, and Towns Railroad Empires
Industry in the New South
Forest Products
Metals and Minerals
Processed Farm Products
Tobacco Manufacturing
Cotton Manufacturing
Urbanization in the New South
A Different South: At the Turn of the Century Chapter 20. The South and the Crisis of the 1890s The Depression of the 1890s
Prelude to the Alliance Movement
The Alliance Movement: Texas Roots
The Alliance in Politics
The Mississippi Plan
The Populists
Political Upheaval
The Populist Legacy
Disfranchisement: Jim Crow and Southern Politics
The Foundation Resecured Chapter 21. Jim Crow: Black and White South The Atlanta Compromise
Jim Crow
Why Jim Crow?
The Black World
Industrial Workers in the New South
Unions and Unionization in the New South
New Divisions among Protestants
Political Demagogues Chapter 22. Southern Progressives Four Southern Progressives
Progressivism, Southern Style
The Roots of Southern Progressivism
Educational Reform
Health Reforms
Child Labor Reform
Southern Ladies
Prohibition: The Noble Experiment Chapter 23. Restoration and Exile, 1912-1929 The Wilson Administration
A Disrupted Society: The South during World War I
Good Times: The Southern Economy and World War I
Southern Appalachia
The Town World
Business Progressivism and State Government
The Ku Klux Klan Reborn
The Black World
The World of the Farm
The End of the Decade Chapter 24. Religion and Culture in the New South The Scopes Trial
The Religious Heritage of the Twentieth-Century South
Culture in the Postbellum South
The War Within
The Southern Literary Renaissance
Southern Regionalism in the 1920s and 1930s
Gone with the Wind Map Essay: The Changing South: People and Cotton Chapter 25. The Emergence of the Modern South, 1930-1945 The Depression and the South
In the Democratic Majority
The New Deal and Southern Agriculture
The New Deal and Southern Industry
Cracks in the Solid South
Jim Crow: An Uncertain Future
World War II Chapter 26. The End of Jim Crow: The Civil Rights Revolution Jim Crow and the Truman Administration
The Supreme Court and "Separate but Equal"
Brown: Massive Resistance, Calculated Evasion
Public School Desegregation: Little Rock and New Orleans
The Civil Rights Movement
The Kennedy Administration and Civil Rights
Birmingham and the March on Washington
The Voting Rights Act
The Evening News and "History"
Public School Desegregation and the End of "Freedom of Choice" Chapter 27. The Modern South Wallace and National Politics
The Rise of the Southern Republicans
The Collapse of the Solid South
The Republican Party Secures Its Place in Dixie
The Transformation of the Southern Democrats
The Sunbelt
"Cotton Fields No More"
The Metropolitan South Chapter 28. The Sunbelt South: No Eden in Dixie The Vanishing South?
Two Religions: North and South?
Other Faiths: Southern Literature, Football, and Elvis
Persistent Divisions: Black and White Biographies Bibliographical Essay Index About the Authors