[1]
>The War Relocation Camps of World War II--Document 1: https://www.nps.gov/nr/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/89manzanar/89facts2.htm.
[2]
Adams, H. and Gooder, J. 1995. The education of Henry Adams. Penguin.
[3]
Adas, M. 2006. Dominance by design: technological imperatives and America’s civilizing mission. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
[4]
Addams, J. and Sidel, R. 1998. Twenty years at Hull-House: with autobiographical notes. Penguin Books.
[5]
Adelman, J. and Aron, S. 1999. From Borderlands to Borders: Empires, Nation-States, and the Peoples in between in North American History. The American Historical Review. 104, 3 (Jun. 1999). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2650990.
[6]
Agee, J. and Evans, W. 1965. Let us now praise famous men. Peter Owen.
[7]
Alexander, C.C. 1999. Holding the line: the Eisenhower era 1952-1961. UMI Books on Demand.
[8]
Almaguer, T. 2008. Racial fault lines: the historical origins of white supremacy in California. University of California Press.
[9]
Alperovitz, G. 1994. Atomic diplomacy: Hiroshima and Potsdam : the use of the atomic bomb and the American confrontation with Soviet power. Pluto Press.
[10]
Alpers, B.L. 1998. This is the Army: Imagining a Democratic Military in World War II. The Journal of American History. 85, 1 (Jun. 1998). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2568436.
[11]
Ambrose, S.E. and Brinkley, D. 2011. Rise to globalism: American foreign policy since 1938. Penguin.
[12]
American Soldiers in the Philippines Write Home about the War: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/58/.
[13]
Anderegg, M.A. 1991. Inventing Vietnam: the war in film and television. Temple University Press.
[14]
Anderson, T.H. 1995. The movement and the sixties. Oxford University Press.
[15]
Armitage, S. 1996. Here’s to the Women: Western Women Speak Up. The Journal of American History. 83, 2 (Sep. 1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2944947.
[16]
Badger, A.J. 1989. The New Deal: the depression years, 1933-40. Macmillan Education.
[17]
Bailey, Beth Rebels without A Cause? Teenagers in the 50s. History Today. 40, 2.
[18]
Bailey, B.L. and Farber, D.R. 1994. The first strange place: race and sex in World War II Hawaii. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[19]
Baker, P. 1991. The moral frameworks of public life: gender, politics, and the state in rural New York, 1870-1930. Oxford University Press.
[20]
Baldwin, J. 1963. The fire next time. Joseph.
[21]
Barnouw, E. 1990. Tube of plenty: the evolution of American television. Oxford University Press.
[22]
Barrett, J.R. 1987. Work and community in the jungle: Chicago’s packinghouse workers,  1894-1922. University of Illinois Press.
[23]
Baskerville, S.W. and Willett, R. 1985. Nothing else to fear: new perspectives on America in the thirties. Manchester University Press.
[24]
Bauman, J.F. and Coode, T.H. 1988. In the eye of the Great Depression: New Deal reporters and the agony of the American people. Northern Illinois University Press.
[25]
Bell, D. 2000. The end of ideology: on the exhaustion of political ideas in the fifties : with ‘The resumption of history in the new century’. Harvard University Press.
[26]
Bennett, T. 2001. Culture, Power, and Mission to Moscow: Film and Soviet-American Relations during World War II. The Journal of American History. 88, 2 (Sep. 2001). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2675103.
[27]
Berger, M.A. 2005. Sight unseen: whiteness and American visual culture. University of California Press.
[28]
Berger, M.A. and Eakins, T. Man made: Thomas Eakins and the construction of Gilded Age manhood. University of California Press.
[29]
Bernstein, I. 1991. Promises kept: John F. Kennedy’s new frontier. Oxford University Press.
[30]
Bérubé, A. et al. 1990. Coming out under fire: the history of gay men and women in World War II. University of North Carolina Press.
[31]
Betty Friedan, Feminine Mystique Chapter 1: https://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/ows/seminars/tcentury/FeminineMystique.pdf.
[32]
Biles, R. 1990. The Urban South in the Great Depression. The Journal of Southern History. 56, 1 (Feb. 1990). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2210665.
[33]
Blake Slonecker 2008. The Columbia Coalition: African Americans, New Leftists, and Counterculture at the Columbia University Protest of 1968. Journal of Social History. 41, 4 (2008), 967–996.
[34]
Blanchard, M.W. 1998. Oscar Wilde’s America: counterculture in the gilded age. Yale University Press.
[35]
Bloom, A. and Breines, W. 2003. ‘Takin’ it to the streets’: a sixties reader. Oxford University Press.
[36]
Bloom, J. 2000. To show what an Indian can do: sports at Native American boarding schools. University of Minnesota Press.
[37]
Blum, J.M. 1976. V was for victory: politics and American culture during World War II. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
[38]
Bodnar, J. 2001. Saving Private Ryan and Postwar Memory in America. The American Historical Review. 106, 3 (Jun. 2001). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2692325.
[39]
Bodnar, J.E. 1985. The transplanted: a history of immigrants in urban America. Indiana University Press.
[40]
Bonsal, P.W. 1967. Cuba, Castro and the United States. Foreign Affairs. 45, 2 (1967). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/20039231.
[41]
Boyer, P. 1984. From Activism to Apathy: The American People and Nuclear Weapons, 1963-1980. The Journal of American History. 70, 4 (Mar. 1984). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1899750.
[42]
Boyer, P.S. 1978. Urban masses and moral order in America, 1820-1920. Harvard University Press.
[43]
Branch, T. 1988. Parting the waters: Martin Luther King and the Civil rights movement, 1954-63. Macmillan.
[44]
Brauer, C.M. 1982. Kennedy, Johnson, and the War on Poverty. The Journal of American History. 69, 1 (Jun. 1982). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1887754.
[45]
Breines, W. 2002. What’s Love Got to Do with It? White Women, Black Women, and Feminism in the Movement Years. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 27, 4 (Jun. 2002), 1095–1133. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1086/339634.
[46]
Breines, W. 1988. Whose New Left? The Journal of American History. 75, 2 (Sep. 1988). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1887869.
[47]
Bremer, W.W. 1975. Along the ‘American Way’: The New Deal’s Work Relief Programs for the Unemployed. The Journal of American History. 62, 3 (Dec. 1975). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2936218.
[48]
Bremner, R.H. and Reichard, G.W. 1982. Reshaping America: society and institutions, 1945-1960. Ohio State University Press.
[49]
Brinkley, A. 1996. The end of reform: New Deal liberalism in recession and war. Vintage Books.
[50]
Brinkley, A. 1982. Voices of protest: Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and the Great  Depression. Knopf.
[51]
Brody, D. 1993. Workers in industrial America: essays on the twentieth century  struggle. Oxford University Press.
[52]
Brooks, C. 2000. In the Twilight Zone between Black and White: Japanese American Resettlement and Community in Chicago, 1942-1945. The Journal of American History. 86, 4 (Mar. 2000). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2567582.
[53]
Brown, D. 1991. Bury my heart at Wounded Knee: an Indian history of the American  West. Vintage.
[54]
Brown, D. 1973. The gentle tamers: women of the old west. Barrie and Jenkins.
[55]
Bruce Nelson 1993. Organized Labor and the Struggle for Black Equality in Mobile during World War II. The Journal of American History. 80, 3 (1993), 952–988.
[56]
Buhle, M.J. 1981. Women and American socialism, 1870-1920. University of Illinois Press.
[57]
Buhle, P. 1991. Marxism in the United States: remapping the history of the American  Left. Verso.
[58]
Burns, S. 1996. Inventing the modern artist: art and culture in gilded age America. Yale University Press.
[59]
Buzzanco, R. 1999. Vietnam and the transformation of American life. Blackwell Publishers.
[60]
Callow, A.B. 1966. The Tweed Ring. Oxford University Press.
[61]
Campbell, J. 1999. This is the Beat Generation: New York-San Francisco-Paris. Secker & Warburg.
[62]
Canaday, M. 2003. Building a Straight State: Sexuality and Social Citizenship under the 1944 G.I. Bill. Journal of American History. 90, 3 (Dec. 2003). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3660882.
[63]
Carlebach, M.L. 1988. Documentary and Propaganda: The Photographs of the Farm Security Administration. The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts. 8, (Spring 1988). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1503967.
[64]
Carlson, L.A. 1981. Indians, bureaucrats, and land: the Dawes Act and the decline of Indian farming. Greenwood Press.
[65]
Carlton, D. 2000. Churchill and the Soviet Union. Manchester University Press.
[66]
Carnegie, A. and Van Dyke, J.C. 1920. Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie. Constable.
[67]
Caro, R.A. 1982. The years of Lyndon Johnson. Knopf.
[68]
Caro, R.A. 1991. The years of Lyndon Johnson: [Vol.2]: Means of ascent. Vintage Books.
[69]
Caro, R.A. 2002. The years of Lyndon Johnson: [Vol.3]: Master of the Senate. Jonathan Cape.
[70]
Caro, R.A. 2014. The years of Lyndon Johnson: [Vol.4]: The passage of power. The Bodley Head.
[71]
Carson, C. 1981. In struggle: SNCC and the black awakening of the 1960s. Harvard University Press.
[72]
Carson, C. 1991. The eyes on the prize: civil rights reader : documents, speeches and  firsthand accounts from the Black Freedom struggle, 1954-1990. Penguin.
[73]
Carter, C. Writing with Light: Jacob Riis’s Ambivalent Exposures. College English. 71, 2, 117–141.
[74]
Carter, D. 1992. Cracking the Ike age: aspects of fifties America. Aarhus University Press.
[75]
Carter, P.A. 1983. Another part of the fifties. Columbia University Press.
[76]
Cashman, S.D. America in the Gilded Age: from the death of Lincoln to the rise of Theodore Roosevelt. New York University Press.
[77]
Caute, D. 1978. The great fear: the anti-Communist purge under Truman and Eisenhower. Simon and Schuster.
[78]
Cavallo, D. 1999. A fiction of the past: the sixties in American history. Palgrave.
[79]
Chafe, W.H. 1980. Civilities and civil rights: Greensboro, North Carolina and the  black struggle for freedom. Oxford University Press.
[80]
Chafe, W.H. 2003. The achievement of American liberalism: the New Deal and its legacies. Columbia University Press.
[81]
Chafe, W.H. 2011. The unfinished journey: America since World War II. Oxford University Press.
[82]
Chafe, W.H. 2011. The unfinished journey: America since World War II. Oxford University Press.
[83]
Chafe, W.H. 1977. Women and equality: changing patterns in American culture. Oxford University Press.
[84]
Charters, A. 1993. The Penguin Book of the Beats. Penguin Books.
[85]
Chayefsky, P. 1955. Television plays. Simon and Schuster.
[86]
Cheryl Greenberg 1995. Black and Jewish Responses to Japanese Internment. 14, 2 (1995), 3–37.
[87]
Churchill, W. 1997. A little matter of genocide: holocaust and denial in the Americas,  1492 to the present. City Lights Books.
[88]
Churchill, W. 2003. Acts of rebellion: the Ward Churchill reader. Routledge.
[89]
Clayton R. Koppes 1986. Blacks, Loyalty, and Motion-Picture Propaganda in World War II. The Journal of American History. 73, 2 (1986), 383–406.
[90]
Cohen, L. 2008. Making a new deal: industrial workers in Chicago, 1919-1939. Cambridge University Press.
[91]
Cone, J.H. 1991. Martin & Malcolm & America: a dream or a nightmare. Orbis Books.
[92]
Conor, L. 2004. The spectacular modern woman: feminine visibility in the 1920s. Indiana University Press.
[93]
Cook, R. 1998. Sweet land of liberty?: the African-American struggle for civil rights in the twentieth century. Longman.
[94]
Coontz, S. 2011. A strange stirring: the Feminine mystique and American women at the dawn of the 1960s. Basic Books.
[95]
Coontz, S. 1997. The way we really are: coming to terms with America’s changing families. BasicBooks.
[96]
Costello, J. 1985. Love, sex and war: changing values, 1939-45. Collins.
[97]
Cott, N.F. 2004. No small courage: a history of women in the United States. Oxford University Press.
[98]
Cott, N.F. 1987. The grounding of modern feminism. Yale University Press.
[99]
Cott, N.F. and Pleck, E. 1979. A Heritage of her own: toward a new social history of American women. Simon and Schuster.
[100]
Cronon, W. 1991. Nature’s metropolis: Chicago and the Great West. Norton.
[101]
Cronon, W. 1987. Revisiting the Vanishing Frontier: The Legacy of Frederick Jackson Turner. The Western Historical Quarterly. 18, 2 (Apr. 1987). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/969581.
[102]
Cronon, W. et al. 1992. Under an open sky: rethinking America’s Western past. W.W. Norton.
[103]
Cullinane, M.P. 2012. Liberty and American anti-imperialism: 1898-1909. Palgrave Macmillan.
[104]
Cuordileone, K.A. 2000. ‘Politics in an Age of Anxiety’: Cold War Political Culture and the Crisis in American Masculinity, 1949-1960. The Journal of American History. 87, 2 (Sep. 2000). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2568762.
[105]
Dallek, R. 1979. Franklin D. Roosevelt and American foreign policy, 1932-1945. Oxford University Press.
[106]
Daniels, R. 1971. The Bonus March: an episode of the great depression. Greenwood Pub. Co.
[107]
David H. Onkst 1998. "First a Negro … Incidentally a Veteran”: Black World War Two Veterans and the G.I. Bill of Rights in the Deep South, 1944–1948. Journal of Social History. 31, 3 (1998), 517–543.
[108]
Davis, M. 1986. Prisoners of the American dream: politics and economy in the history of the US working class. Verso Editions.
[109]
Dawley, A. 1991. Struggles for justice: social responsibility and the liberal state. The Belknap Press of Harvard University  Press.
[110]
De León, A. 2002. Racial frontiers: Africans, Chinese, and Mexicans in western America, 1848-1890. University of New Mexico Press.
[111]
Dear Miss Breed: Letters from Camp: http://www.janm.org/exhibits/breed/1_6_42_t.htm.
[112]
DeBenedetti, C. and Chatfield, C. 1990. An American ordeal: the antiwar movement of the Vietnam era. SyracuseUniversity Press.
[113]
Degler, C.N. 1980. At odds: women and the family in America from the Revolution to the  present. Oxford University Press.
[114]
Denning, M. 2010. The cultural front: the laboring of American culture in the twentieth century. Verso.
[115]
Des Jardins, J. 2003. Women and the historical enterprise in America: gender, race, and the politics of memory, 1880-1945. University of North Carolina Press.
[116]
Diggins, J.P. 1988. The proud decades: America in war and in peace, 1941-1960. Norton.
[117]
Diggins, J.P. 1988. The proud decades: America in war and in peace, 1941-1960. Norton.
[118]
Doherty, T.P. 1999. Projections of war: Hollywood, American culture, and World War II. Columbia University Press.
[119]
Dora L. Costa 2000. From Mill Town to Board Room: The Rise of Women’s Paid Labor. The Journal of Economic Perspectives. 14, 4 (2000), 101–122.
[120]
Dorothea Lange’s ‘Migrant Mother’ Photographs in the Farm Security Administration Collection: An Overview (Library of Congress): https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/list/128_migm.html.
[121]
Douglas, A. 1996. The feminization of American culture. Papermac.
[122]
Dubofsky, M. 1975. Industrialism and the American worker, 1865-1920. AHM Publishing Corporation.
[123]
Dubofsky, M. 1969. We shall be all: a history of the Industrial Workers of the world. Quadrangle/New York Times Book Co.
[124]
DuBois, E.C. 1978. Feminism and suffrage: the emergence of an independent women’s movement in America, 1848-1869. Cornell University Press.
[125]
DuBois, E.C. 1987. Working Women, Class Relations, and Suffrage Militance: Harriot Stanton Blatch and the New York Woman Suffrage Movement, 1894-1909. The Journal of American History. 74, 1 (Jun. 1987). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1908504.
[126]
Dunbar-Ortiz, R. 2014. An indigenous peoples’ history of the United States. Beacon Press.
[127]
Eagles, C.W. 2000. Toward New Histories of the Civil Rights Era. The Journal of Southern History. 66, 4 (Nov. 2000). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2588012.
[128]
Edwin Amenta and Drew Halfmann 2000. Wage Wars: Institutional Politics, WPA Wages, and the Struggle for U.S. Social Policy. American Sociological Review. 65, 4 (2000), 506–528.
[129]
Ehrenreich, B. 1983. The hearts of men: American dreams and the flight from commitment. Anchor Press/Doubleday.
[130]
‘Enemies from Within’: Senator Joseph R. McCarthy’s Accusations of Disloyalty: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6456.
[131]
Erenberg, L.A. 1986. From New York to Middletown: Repeal and the Legitimization of Nightlife in the Great Depression. American Quarterly. 38, 5 (Winter 1986). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2712822.
[132]
Eric Foner 1984. Why Is There No Socialism in the United States? History Workshop. 17 (1984), 57–80.
[133]
Eugene J. Rosi 1965. Mass and Attentive Opinion on Nuclear Weapons Test and Fallout, 1954-1963. The Public Opinion Quarterly. 29, 2 (1965), 280–297.
[134]
Evans, S.M. 1989. Born for liberty: a history of women in America. Free Press.
[135]
Fairclough, A. 1987. To redeem the soul of America: the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and Martin Luther King, Jr. University of Georgia Press.
[136]
Faragher, J.M. et al. 1993. The Frontier Trail: Rethinking Turner and Reimagining the American West. The American Historical Review. 98, 1 (Feb. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2166384.
[137]
Feis, H. 1970. From trust to terror: the onset of the cold war, 1945-1950. Blond.
[138]
Fink, L. 1993. Major problems in the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era: documents  and essays. D.C. Heath.
[139]
Fink, L. 1983. Workingmen’s democracy: the Knights of Labor and American politics. University of Illinois Press.
[140]
Fitzgerald, S.J. 2015. Native women and land: narratives of dispossession and resurgence. University of New Mexico Press.
[141]
Fixico, D.L. 2012. The invasion of Indian country in the twentieth century: American capitalism and tribal natural resources. University Press of Colorado.
[142]
Forman, J. The making of Black revolutionaries: a personal account. Macmillan.
[143]
Fradkin, P.L. Fallout: an American nuclear tragedy. University of Arizona Press.
[144]
Franklin Delano Roosevelt - First Fireside Chat (‘The Banking Crisis’): http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/fdrfirstfiresidechat.html.
[145]
Freeberg, E. 2008. Democracy’s prisoner: Eugene V. Debs, the great war, and the right to dissent. Harvard University Press.
[146]
Freedman, E.B. 1974. The New Woman: Changing Views of Women in the 1920s. The Journal of American History. 61, 2 (Sep. 1974). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1903954.
[147]
Freeman, J. 1978. Delivering the goods: Industrial unionism during World War II. Labor History. 19, 4 (Sep. 1978), 570–593. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00236567808584513.
[148]
Fried, R.M. 1990. Nightmare in red: the McCarthy era in perspective. Oxford University Press.
[149]
Friedman, A. 2007. The Strange Career of Annie Lee Moss: Rethinking Race, Gender, and McCarthyism. Journal of American History. 94, 2 (Sep. 2007), 445–468. DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/25094960.
[150]
Friedman, L.J. and McGarvie, M.D. 2003. Charity, philanthropy, and civility in American history. Cambridge University Press.
[151]
Frisch, M.H. and Walkowitz, D.J. 1983. Working-class America: essays on labor, community, and American  society. University of Illinois Press.
[152]
Gaddis, J.L. 1997. We now know: rethinking Cold War history. Clarendon Press.
[153]
Galbraith, J. 1985. The Theory of Social Balance. The affluent society. Deutsch. 190–2014.
[154]
Galbraith, J.K. 1985. The affluent society. Deutsch.
[155]
Gans, H.J. 1967. The Levittowners: ways of life and politics in a new suburban  community. Allen Lane.
[156]
Garcia, G.L. 2000. I am the Other: Puerto Rico in the Eyes of North Americans, 1898. The Journal of American History. 87, 1 (Jun. 2000). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2567915.
[157]
Garrow, D.J. 1986. Bearing the cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern  Christian Leadership Conference. W. Morrow.
[158]
George Dimock 1993. Children of the Mills: Re-Reading Lewis Hine’s Child-Labour Photographs. Oxford Art Journal. 16, 2 (1993), 37–54.
[159]
Gerstle, G. 1995. Race and the Myth of the Liberal Consensus. The Journal of American History. 82, 2 (Sep. 1995). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2082187.
[160]
Gilbert, J.B. 1986. A cycle of outrage: America’s reaction to the juvenile delinquent in the 1950s. Oxford University Press.
[161]
Gitlin, T. 1993. The sixties: years of hope, days of rage. Bantam Books.
[162]
Glad, P.W. 1966. Progressives and the Business Culture of the 1920s. The Journal of American History. 53, 1 (Jun. 1966). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1893931.
[163]
Gloria Steinem - Women Voters Can’t Be Trusted: http://www.msmagazine.com/spring2002/steinem.asp.
[164]
Goldberg, M.L. An army of women: gender and politics in gilded age Kansas. Johns Hopkins University Press.
[165]
Goldfield, M. 1989. Worker Insurgency, Radical Organization, and New Deal Labor Legislation. The American Political Science Review. 83, 4 (Dec. 1989). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1961668.
[166]
Goldstein, J.S. 2001. War and gender: how gender shapes the war system and vice versa. Cambridge University Press.
[167]
Goodwyn, L. 1976. Democratic promise: the Populist moment in America. Oxford University Press.
[168]
Gordon, C. 1999. Major problems in American history, 1920-1945: documents and essays. Houghton Mifflin.
[169]
Gordon, R.W. 1969. The Change in the Political Alignment of Chicago’s Negroes During the New Deal. The Journal of American History. 56, 3 (Dec. 1969). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1904208.
[170]
Gosse, V. and Moser, R.R. 2003. The world the sixties made: politics and culture in recent America. Temple University Press.
[171]
Graebner, W. 1990. The age of doubt: American thought and culture in the 1940s. Twayne Publishers.
[172]
Green, J.R. 1978. Grass-roots socialism: radical movements in the Southwest, 1895-1943. Louisiana State University Press.
[173]
Gregory, J.N. 1991. American exodus: the Dust Bowl migration and Okie culture in California. Oxford University Press.
[174]
Grinde, D.A. and Johansen, B.E. Ecocide of Native America: environmental destruction of Indian lands and peoples. Clear Light.
[175]
Griswold del Castillo, R. 2008. World War II and Mexican American civil rights. University of Texas Press.
[176]
Guralnick, P. 1994. Last train to Memphis: the rise of Elvis Presley. Little, Brown.
[177]
Gutierrez, D.G. 1993. Significant to Whom?: Mexican Americans and the History of the American West. The Western Historical Quarterly. 24, 4 (Nov. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/970704.
[178]
Gutman, H.G. 1977. Work, culture, and society in industrializing America: essays in  American working-class and social history. Blackwell.
[179]
Halberstam, D. 1994. The Fifties. Ballantine Books.
[180]
Hamby, A.L. 1999. The New Deal: Avenues for Reconsideration. Polity. 31, 4 (Summer 1999). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3235242.
[181]
Hamilton, D.E. 1999. The New Deal. Houghton Mifflin.
[182]
Hansen, C. 1960. Social Influences on Jazz Style: Chicago, 1920-30. American Quarterly. 12, 4 (Winter 1960). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2710331.
[183]
Harris, H.J. 1982. The right to manage: industrial relations policies of American  business in the 1940s. University of Wisconsin Press.
[184]
Harris, J. 1995. Federal art and national culture: the politics of identity in New  Deal America. Cambridge University Press.
[185]
Hartmann, S.M. 1995. The home front and beyond: American women in the 1940s. Twayne Publishers.
[186]
Herring, G.C. 1986. Vietnam Remembered. The Journal of American History. 73, 1 (Jun. 1986). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1903610.
[187]
Hersh, S.M. 1998. The dark side of Camelot. Back Bay Books.
[188]
Heymann, C.D. 1998. RFK: a candid biography of Robert F. Kennedy. Heinemann.
[189]
Higham, J. 1981. Strangers in the land: patterns of American nativism, 1860-1925. Greenwood Press.
[190]
Higonnet, M.R. 1987. Behind the lines: gender and the two world wars. Yale University Press.
[191]
Hilfrich, F. 2012. Debating American exceptionalism: Empire and democracy in the wake of the Spanish-American war. Palgrave Macmillan.
[192]
Hilkey, J.A. 1997. Character is capital: success manuals and manhood in Gilded Age  America. University of North Carolina Press.
[193]
Hine, D.C. 2003. Black Professionals and Race Consciousness: Origins of the Civil Rights Movement, 1890-1950. Journal of American History. 89, 4 (Mar. 2003). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3092543.
[194]
Hine, R.V. and Faragher, J.M. 2000. The American west: a new interpretative history. Yale University Press.
[195]
Hodgson, G. 1976. America in our time. Vintage Books.
[196]
Hodgson, G. 1977. In our time: America from World War II to Nixon. Macmillan.
[197]
Hoerder, D. 1986. ‘Struggle a hard battle’: essays on working-class immigrants. Northern Illinois University Press.
[198]
Hofstadter, R. 1962. The age of reform: from Bryan to F.D.R. Cape.
[199]
Hoganson, K.L. 1998. Fighting for American manhood: how gender politics provoked the  Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars. Yale University Press.
[200]
Holt, J. 1977. Trade unionism in the British and U.S. steel industries, 1880–1914: A comparative study. Labor History. 18, 1 (Jan. 1977), 5–35. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00236567708584416.
[201]
Holt, T.C. and Brown, E.B. 2000. Major problems in African-American history: documents and essays. Houghton Mifflin.
[202]
Honey, M. 1985. Creating Rosie the Riveter: class, gender, and propaganda during World War II. University of Massachusetts Press.
[203]
Hovenkamp, H. 1988. Regulatory Conflict in the Gilded Age: Federalism and the Railroad Problem. The Yale Law Journal. 97, 6 (May 1988). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/796340.
[204]
Hungry Hearts: 1920. http://nationalhumanitiescenter.org/pds/gilded/people/text6/yezierska.pdf.
[205]
Hunt, M.H. 2007. The American ascendancy: how the United States gained and wielded global dominance. University of North Carolina Press.
[206]
Immerman, R.H. The CIA in Guatemala: the foreign policy of intervention. University of Texas Press.
[207]
Isenberg, A.C. 2000. The destruction of the bison: an environmental history, 1750-1920. Cambridge University Press.
[208]
Isserman, M. and Kazin, M. 2012. America divided: the civil war of the 1960s. Oxford University Press.
[209]
Jacobson, M.F. 2000. Barbarian virtues: the United States encounters foreign peoples at  home and abroad, 1876-1917. Hill and Wang.
[210]
Jacoby, S.M. 2004. Employing bureaucracy: managers, unions, and the transformation of work in the 20th century. Lawrence Erlbaum.
[211]
James M. McCormick and Eugene R. Wittkopf 1990. Bipartisanship, Partisanship, and Ideology in Congressional-Executive Foreign Policy Relations, 1947-1988. The Journal of Politics. 52, 4 (1990), 1077–1100.
[212]
Jamison, A. and Eyerman, R. 1994. Seeds of the sixties. University of California Press.
[213]
Jill Conway 1964. Jane Addams: An American Heroine. Daedalus. 93, 2 (1964), 761–780.
[214]
Joel Olson 2008. Whiteness and the Polarization of American Politics. Political Research Quarterly. 61, 4 (2008), 704–718.
[215]
John A. Kirk 2004. State of the Art: Martin Luther King, Jr. Journal of American Studies. 38, 2 (2004), 329–347.
[216]
Jones, H. and Woods, R.B. 1993. Origins of the Cold War in Europe and the Near East: Recent Historiography and the National Security Imperative. Diplomatic history. 17, 2 (1993), 251–276. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7709.1993.tb00550.x.
[217]
Kasson, J.S. 2001. Buffalo Bill’s Wild West: celebrity, memory, and popular history. Hill and Wang.
[218]
Kaufman, B. 1978. The United States Response to the Soviet Economic Offensive of the 1950s. Diplomatic history. 2, 2 (1978), 153–165. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7709.1978.tb00428.x.
[219]
Kennedy, D.M. 1999. Freedom from fear: the American people in Depression and war,  1929-1945. Oxford University Press.
[220]
Kennedy, D.M. 1999. Freedom from fear: the American people in Depression and war,  1929-1945. Oxford University Press.
[221]
Kennedy, D.M. 1999. Freedom from fear: the American people in Depression and war,  1929-1945. Oxford University Press.
[222]
Kennedy, D.M. 1982. Over here: the First World War and American society. Oxford University Press.
[223]
Kerber, L.K. 1980. Women of the Republic: Intellect and ideology in Revolutionary  America. Published for the Institute of Early American History  and Culture by the University of North Carolina Press.
[224]
Kessler-Harris, A. 2007. Gendering labor history. University of Illinois Press.
[225]
Kessler-Harris, A. 1982. Out to work: a history of wage-earning women in the United States. Oxford University Press.
[226]
Kessler‐Harris, A. 1983. "Rosie the riveter”;: Who was she? Labor History. 24, 2 (Mar. 1983), 249–253. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00236568308584707.
[227]
Kester, H. 1969. Revolt among the sharecroppers. Arno Press.
[228]
‘Kill the Indian, and Save the Man’: Capt. Richard H. Pratt on the Education of Native Americans: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929/.
[229]
King, R.H. 1996. Civil rights and the idea of freedom. University of Georgia Press.
[230]
Klein, K.L. 1999. Frontiers of historical imagination: narrating the European conquest of native America, 1890-1990. University of California Press.
[231]
Kolko, G. 1986. Vietnam: anatomy of a war, 1940-1975. Allen & Unwin.
[232]
Konzett, D.C. 1997. Administered Identities and Linguistic Assimilation: The Politics of Immigrant English in Anzia Yezierska’s Hungry Hearts. American Literature. 69, 3 (Sep. 1997). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2928216.
[233]
Korematsu v. United States | US Law | LII / Legal Information Institute: https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/323/214.
[234]
Kraditor, A.S. 1965. The ideas of the woman suffrage movement, 1890-1920. Columbia University Press.
[235]
Kramer, P.A. 2006. The blood of government: race, empire, the United States, & the Philippines. University of North Carolina Press.
[236]
Kramer, Paul Making Concessions: Race and Empire Revisited at the Philippine Exposition, St. Louis, 1901-1905. Radical History Review. 73.
[237]
Kristina Zarlengo 1999. Civilian Threat, the Suburban Citadel, and Atomic Age American Women. Signs. 24, 4 (1999), 925–958.
[238]
KRUPAR, J. 2007. Burying Atomic History: The Mound Builders of Fernald and Weldon Spring. The Public Historian. 29, 1 (Feb. 2007), 31–58. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1525/tph.2007.29.1.31.
[239]
Kruse, K.M. and Tuck, S.G.N. Fog of war: the Second World War and the civil rights movement. Oxford University Press.
[240]
Kutler, S.I. 1992. The wars of Watergate: the last crisis of Richard Nixon. Norton.
[241]
LaFeber, W. 1994. The American age: United States foreign policy at home and abroad :  1750 to the present. W. W. Norton.
[242]
LaFeber, W. 1994. The American age: United States foreign policy at home and abroad :  1750 to the present. W. W. Norton.
[243]
LaFeber, W. 1994. The American age: United States foreign policy at home and abroad :  1750 to the present. W. W. Norton.
[244]
LaFeber, W. 1987. The Constitution and United States Foreign Policy: An Interpretation. The Journal of American History. 74, 3 (Dec. 1987). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1902149.
[245]
Lange, D. et al. 1999. An American exodus: a record of human erosion. J.-M. Place.
[246]
Lears, T.J.J. 1994. No place of grace: antimodernism and the transformation of American  culture, 1880-1920. University of Chicago Press.
[247]
Lears, T.J.J. 2010. Rebirth of a nation: the making of modern America, 1877-1920. Harper Perennial.
[248]
Leary, Timothy 1967. Timothy Leary - Turn On.
[249]
Leff, M.H. 1983. Taxing the ‘Forgotten Man’: The Politics of Social Security Finance in the New Deal. The Journal of American History. 70, 2 (Sep. 1983). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1900209.
[250]
Leffler, M.P. 1992. A preponderance of power: national security, the Truman  administration, and the Cold War. Stanford University Press.
[251]
Leonard, K.A. 2006. The battle for Los Angeles: racial ideology and World War II. University of New Mexico Press.
[252]
Letter from Louise Ogawa to Clara Breed (30 November 1942): http://www.janm.org/exhibits/breed/11_30_42_t.htm.
[253]
Leuchtenburg, W.E. 1983. A troubled feast: American society since 1945. Little, Brown.
[254]
Leuchtenburg, W.E. Franklin D. Roosevelt and the New Deal, 1932-1940. Harper & Row.
[255]
Leuchtenburg, W.E. 1995. The FDR years: on Roosevelt and his legacy. Columbia University Press.
[256]
Levine, R.F. 1988. Class struggle and the New Deal: industrial labor, industrial capital, and the state. University Press of Kansas.
[257]
Levine, S. 1983. Labor’s True Woman: Domesticity and Equal Rights in the Knights of Labor. The Journal of American History. 70, 2 (Sep. 1983). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1900207.
[258]
Lewis Hine Photographs: https://www.archives.gov/exhibits/picturing_the_century/portfolios/port_hine.html#.
[259]
Licht, W. 1995. Industrializing America: the nineteenth century. John Hopkins University Press.
[260]
Lichtenstein, N. 1982. Labor’s war at home: the CIO in World War II. Cambridge University Press.
[261]
Limerick, P.N. 1992. Disorientation and Reorientation: The American Landscape Discovered from the West. The Journal of American History. 79, 3 (Dec. 1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2080797.
[262]
Limerick, P.N. 1987. The legacy of conquest: the unbroken past of the American West. W.W. Norton.
[263]
Link, A.S. 1963. Woodrow Wilson and the progressive era, 1910-1917. Harper & Row.
[264]
Link, A.S. Woodrow Wilson: revolution, war, and peace. AHM.
[265]
Lipsitz, G. and Lipsitz, G. Rainbow at midnight: labor and culture in the 1940s. University of Illinois Press.
[266]
Love, E.T.L. 2004. Race over empire: racism and U.S. imperialism, 1865-1900. University of North Carolina Press.
[267]
Lubove, R. The progressives and the slums: tenement house reform in New York  City, 1890-1917. Greenwood Press.
[268]
Lurie, A. 1974. The war between the Tates. Heinemann.
[269]
MacDonald, C.A. 1986. Korea: the war before Vietnam. Macmillan.
[270]
MacDonald, I. 2005. Revolution in the head: the Beatles’ records and the sixties. Pimlico.
[271]
Make Mine Freedom : Sutherland (John) Productions : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/MakeMine1948.
[272]
Malcolm X: The Ballot or the Bullet: http://www.edchange.org/multicultural/speeches/malcolm_x_ballot.html.
[273]
Marable, M. 1991. Race, reform, and rebellion: the second reconstruction in black America, 1945-1990. University Press of Mississippi.
[274]
Marcus, G. 2000. Mystery train: images of America in rock ‘n’ roll music. Faber.
[275]
Mark H. Leff 1991. The Politics of Sacrifice on the American Home Front in Worid War II. The Journal of American History. 77, 4 (1991), 1296–1318.
[276]
Marsha Orgeron 2003. Making ‘It’ in Hollywood: Clara Bow, Fandom, and Consumer Culture. Cinema Journal. 42, 4 (2003), 76–97.
[277]
Martin, C.J. Dance marathons: performing American culture of the 1920sand 1930s. University Press of Mississippi.
[278]
Martin Luther King: Letter from a Birmingham Jail: https://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html.
[279]
Marwick, A. 1998. The sixties: cultural revolution in Britain, France, Italy, and the  United States, c.1958-c.1974. Oxford University Press.
[280]
Marybeth Hamilton 1998. Sexual Politics and African-American Music; Or, Placing Little Richard in History. History Workshop Journal. 46 (1998), 160–176.
[281]
Matusow, A.J. 1984. The unraveling of America: a history of liberalism in the 1960s. Harper & Row.
[282]
Maury Klein 1978. In Search of Jay Gould. The Business History Review. 52, 2 (1978), 166–199.
[283]
Mayer, M.S. 1998. The Eisenhower presidency and the 1950s. Houghton Mifflin.
[284]
Mc Laurin, M.A. 1976. The racial policies of the knights of labor and the organization of Southern Black workers. Labor History. 17, 4 (Sep. 1976), 568–585. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00236567608584409.
[285]
McElvaine, R.S. 1993. The Great Depression: America, 1929-1941. Times Books.
[286]
McFadden, M.T. 1993. ‘America’s Boy Friend Who Can’t Get a Date’: Gender, Race, and the Cultural Work of the Jack Benny Program, 1932-1946. The Journal of American History. 80, 1 (Jun. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2079699.
[287]
McLennan, K.A. 1985. Woman’s Place: ‘Marriage’ in America’s Gilded Age. Theatre Journal. 37, 3 (Oct. 1985). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3206853.
[288]
McMahon, R.J. 1986. Eisenhower and Third World Nationalism: A Critique of the Revisionists. Political Science Quarterly. 101, 3 (1986). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2151625.
[289]
McMahon, R.J. 2008. Major problems in the history of the Vietnam War: documents and essays. Houghton Mifflin.
[290]
McMillen, N.R. 1977. Black Enfranchisement in Mississippi: Federal Enforcement and Black Protest in the 1960s. The Journal of Southern History. 43, 3 (Aug. 1977). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2207646.
[291]
Meier, A. and Bracey, J.H. 1993. The NAACP as a Reform Movement, 1909-1965: ‘To Reach the Conscience of America’. The Journal of Southern History. 59, 1 (Feb. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2210346.
[292]
Meier, A. and Rudwick, E.M. 1973. CORE: a study in the civil rights movement, 1942-1968. Oxford University Press.
[293]
Melder, K.E. 1977. Beginnings of sisterhood: the American woman’s rights movement,  1800-1850. Schocken Books.
[294]
Merrill, D. and Paterson, T.G. 2010. Major problems in American foreign relations: documents and essays. Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
[295]
Messer, R. 1977. Paths Not Taken: The US Department of State and Alternatives to Containment, 1945-1946. Diplomatic history. 1, 4 (1977), 297–319. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7709.1977.tb00244.x.
[296]
Meyerowitz, J. 1993. Beyond the Feminine Mystique: A Reassessment of Postwar Mass Culture, 1946- 1958. The Journal of American History. 79, 4 (Mar. 1993). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2080212.
[297]
Mignon Duffy 2007. Doing the Dirty Work: Gender, Race, and Reproductive Labor in Historical Perspective. Gender and Society. 21, 3 (2007), 313–336.
[298]
Miller, B.M. 2011. From liberation to conquest: the visual and popular cultures of the Spanish-American War of 1898. University of Massachusetts Press.
[299]
Miller, D.T. 1996. On our own: Americans in the sixties. D.C. Heath.
[300]
Miller, J. 1994. Democracy is in the streets: from Port Huron to the siege of Chicago. Harvard University Press.
[301]
Miller, T. 1991. The hippies and American values. University of Tennessee Press.
[302]
Mills, C.W. 1999. The power elite. Oxford University Press.
[303]
Milner, C.A. et al. 1997. Major problems in the history of the American West: documents and essays. Houghton Mifflin.
[304]
Milner, C.A. et al. 1994. The Oxford history of the American West. Oxford University Press.
[305]
Montgomery, D. 1987. The fall of the house of labor: the workplace, the state and  American labor activism, 1865-1925. Cambridge University Press.
[306]
Montgomery, D. 1980. To study the people: The American working class∗. Labor History. 21, 4 (Sep. 1980), 485–512. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00236568008584594.
[307]
Moran, K. and Rogin, M. 2000. ‘What’s the Matter with Capra?’: Sullivan’s Travels and the Popular Front. Representations. 71 (Jul. 2000), 106–134. DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2902927.
[308]
Morgan, H.W. 1970. The gilded age. Syracuse University Press.
[309]
Morris, A.D. 1984. The origins of the civil rights movement: Black communities organizing for change. Free Press.
[310]
Murphy, G. 2010. Shadowing the white man’s burden: U.S. imperialism and the problem of the color line. New York University Press.
[311]
Muscio, G. 1996. Hollywood’s new deal. Temple University Press.
[312]
Myres, S.L. 1982. Westering women and the frontier experience, 1800-1915. University of New Mexico Press.
[313]
Nalty, B.C. 1986. Strength for the fight: a history of black Americans in the military. Free Press.
[314]
Nash, G.D. 1990. The American West transformed: the impact of the Second World War. University of Nebraska Press.
[315]
Nash, R. 2001. Wilderness and the American mind. Yale Nota Bene.
[316]
‘National Suicide’: Margaret Chase Smith and Six Republican Senators Speak Out Against Joseph McCarthy’s Attack on ‘Individual Freedom’: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/6459.
[317]
Navasky, V.S. 2003. Naming names. Hill and Wang.
[318]
Newman, L.M. 1999. White women’s rights: the racial origins of feminism in the United States. Oxford University Press.
[319]
Noakes, J. 1992. The Civilian in war: the Home Front in Europe, Japan and the USA in  World War II. University of Exeter Press.
[320]
Nugent, W.T.K. 1992. Crossings: the great transatlantic migrations, 1870-1914. Indiana University Press.
[321]
Oates, S.B. 1998. Let the trumpet sound: a life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Payback.
[322]
Oestreicher, R.J. 1986. Solidarity and fragmentation: working people and class consciousness in Detroit, 1875-1900. University of Illinois Press.
[323]
Okihiro, G.Y. 1991. Cane fires: the anti-Japanese movement in Hawaii, 1865-1945. Temple University Press.
[324]
Owings, A. 2011. Indian voices: listening to Native Americans. Rutgers University Press.
[325]
Pascoe, P. 1996. Miscegenation Law, Court Cases, and Ideologies of ‘Race’ in Twentieth-Century America. The Journal of American History. 83, 1 (Jun. 1996). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2945474.
[326]
Pascoe, P. 1991. Race, Gender, and Intercultural Relations: The Case of Interracial Marriage. Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 12, 1 (1991). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3346572.
[327]
Paul A. Shackel and Matthew M. Palus 2006. The Gilded Age and Working-Class Industrial Communities. American Anthropologist. 108, 4 (2006), 828–841.
[328]
Pells, R.H. 1989. The liberal mind in a conservative age: American intellectuals in the 1940s and 1950s. Wesleyan University Press.
[329]
Perkins, F. 1934. People at work. The John Day co.
[330]
Perlstein, R. 1996. Who Owns The Sixties? Lingua Franca. 6, 4 (1996).
[331]
Perry, B. 1991. Malcolm: the life of a man who changed black America. Station Hill Press.
[332]
Pete Daniel 1990. Going among Strangers: Southern Reactions to World War II. The Journal of American History. 77, 3 (1990), 886–911.
[333]
Photos: Before and After Carlisle: http://www.radiolab.org/story/photos-before-and-after-carlisle/.
[334]
Polenberg, R. 1980. One nation divisible: class, race, and ethnicity in the United States since 1938. Penguin Books.
[335]
Polenberg, R. 1972. War and society: the United States, 1941-1945. Lippincott.
[336]
Poole, M. 2006. The segregated origins of social security: African Americans and the welfare state. University of North Carolina Press.
[337]
Port Huron Statement: http://www2.iath.virginia.edu/sixties/HTML_docs/Resources/Primary/Manifestos/SDS_Port_Huron.html.
[338]
Potter, C.B. 1998. War on crime: bandits, G-men, and the politics of mass culture. Rutgers University Press.
[339]
Raines, H. 1983. My soul is rested: movement days in the Deep South remembered. Penguin.
[340]
Reeves, T.C. 1997. A question of character: a life of John F. Kennedy. Crown Forum.
[341]
Reeves, T.C. 1982. The life and times of Joe McCarthy: a biography. Stein and Day.
[342]
Richard White 2003. Information, Markets, and Corruption: Transcontinental Railroads in the Gilded Age. The Journal of American History. 90, 1 (2003), 19–43.
[343]
Rifkin, M. 2009. Manifesting America: the imperial construction of U.S. national space. Oxford University Press.
[344]
Riley, G. 2004. Confronting race: women and Indians on the frontier, 1815-1915. University of New Mexico Press.
[345]
Riley, G. 1984. Women and Indians on the frontier, 1825-1915. University of New Mexico Press.
[346]
Robinson, G. 2001. By order of the president: FDR and the internment of Japanese  Americans. Harvard University Press.
[347]
Rollins, P.C. and O’Connor, J.E. 2008. Why we fought: America’s wars in film and history. University Press of Kentucky.
[348]
Rosenberg, R. 1993. Divided lives: American women in the twentieth century. Penguin.
[349]
Rossinow, Doug The New Left in the Counterculture:  Hypotheses and Evidence. Radical History Review. 67.
[350]
Ruíz, V. 1987. Cannery women, cannery lives: Mexican women, unionization, and the California food processing industry, 1930-1950. University of New Mexico Press.
[351]
Rymph, C.E. Republican women: feminism and conservatism from suffrage through the rise of the new right. University of North Carolina Press.
[352]
Salazar, J. 2010. Bodies of Reform: The Rhetoric of Character in Gilded Age America. New York University Press.
[353]
Saxton, A. 1971. The indispensable enemy: labor and the anti-Chinese movement in  California. University of California  Press.
[354]
Schlesinger, A.M. 1960. The age of Roosevelt: Vol.2: The coming of the New Deal. Heinemann.
[355]
Schulman, B.J. 1999. Out of the Streets and into the Classroom? The New Left and the Counterculture in United States History Textbooks. The Journal of American History. 85, 4 (Mar. 1999). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2568271.
[356]
Scott, A.F. 1990. One Woman’s Experience of World War II. The Journal of American History. 77, 2 (Sep. 1990). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2079184.
[357]
Shaw, T. 2007. Hollywood’s Cold War. Edinburgh University Press.
[358]
Sinclair, U. 2002. The jungle. Random House.
[359]
Sitkoff, H. 1971. Racial Militancy and Interracial Violence in the Second World War. The Journal of American History. 58, 3 (Dec. 1971). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1893729.
[360]
Sitkoff, H. and Foner, E. 1993. The struggle for black equality, 1954-1992. Hill and Wang.
[361]
Sklar, K.K. 1997. Florence Kelley and the nation’s work: the rise of women’s political culture, 1830-1900. Yale University Press.
[362]
Sklaroff, L.R. 2002. Constructing G.I. Joe Louis: Cultural Solutions to the ‘Negro Problem’ during World War II. The Journal of American History. 89, 3 (Dec. 2002). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/3092347.
[363]
Slotkin, R. 1998. Gunfighter nation: the myth of the frontier in twentieth-century  America. University of Oklahoma Press.
[364]
Slotkin, R. 1998. The fatal environment: the myth of the frontier in the age of industrialization, 1800-1890. University of Oklahoma Press.
[365]
Smith, A. and LaDuke, W. 2015. Conquest: sexual violence and American Indian genocide. Duke University Press.
[366]
Smith, G. 1987. When Jim Crow met John Bull: black American soldiers in World War II Britain. Tauris.
[367]
Smith, H.N. 1970. Virgin land: the American West as symbol and myth. Harvard University Press.
[368]
Smith, J.S. 2003. New Deal Public Works at War: The WPA and Japanese American Internment. Pacific Historical Review. 72, 1 (Feb. 2003), 63–92. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1525/phr.2003.72.1.63.
[369]
Smith, S.L. 2000. Reimagining Indians: native Americans through Anglo eyes, 1880-1940. Oxford University.
[370]
Sneider, A.L. 2008. Suffragists in an imperial age: U.S. expansion and the woman question, 1870-1929. Oxford University Press.
[371]
Solomon, B.M. 1985. In the company of educated women: a history of women and higher  education in America. Yale University Press.
[372]
Sounes, H. 2001. Down the highway: the life of Bob Dylan. Grove Press.
[373]
Steinbeck, J. 2000. The grapes of wrath. Penguin.
[374]
Steinem, G. 1995. Outrageous acts and everyday rebellions. Henrry Holt.
[375]
Steve Meyer 2002. Rough Manhood: The Aggressive and Confrontational Shop Culture of U.S. Auto Workers during World War II. Journal of Social History. 36, 1 (2002), 125–147.
[376]
Stevens, J. 1993. Storming heaven: LSD and the American dream. Grove.
[377]
Stott, W. 1973. Documentary expression and thirties America. Oxford University Press.
[378]
Strathman, N. 2015. Student Snapshots: An Alternative Approach to the VisualHistory of American Indian Boarding Schools. Humanities. 4, 4 (Oct. 2015), 726–747. DOI:https://doi.org/10.3390/h4040726.
[379]
Sugrue, T.J. 1995. Crabgrass-Roots Politics: Race, Rights, and the Reaction against Liberalism in the Urban North, 1940-1964. The Journal of American History. 82, 2 (Sep. 1995). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2082186.
[380]
Sundstrom, W.A. 1992. Last Hired, First Fired? Unemployment and Urban Black Workers During the Great Depression. The Journal of Economic History. 52, 02 (Jun. 1992). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022050700010834.
[381]
Susan Zeiger 1990. Finding a Cure for War: Women’s Politics and the Peace Movement in the 1920s. Journal of Social History. 24, 1 (1990), 69–86.
[382]
Terkel, S. 1970. Hard times: an oral history of the great depression. Allen Lane.
[383]
Terkel, S. 1997. ‘The good war’: an oral history of World War Two. New Press.
[384]
Terkel, S. 1989. The great divide: second thoughts on the American dream. Headline.
[385]
The Combahee River Collective Statement (1977): http://circuitous.org/scraps/combahee.html.
[386]
The Dawes Act (1887): https://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/resources/archives/eight/dawes.htm.
[387]
The Water Cure | The New Yorker: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2008/02/25/the-water-cure.
[388]
Thelen, D.P. 1969. Social Tensions and the Origins of Progressivism. The Journal of American History. 56, 2 (Sep. 1969). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/1908127.
[389]
Tomlins, C.L. 1985. The state and the unions: labor relations, law, and the organized  labour movement in America, 1880-1960. Cambridge University Press.
[390]
Trachtenberg, A. and Foner, E. 1982. The Incorporation of America: culture and society in the gilded age. Hill and Wang.
[391]
Trotter, J.W. 2001. The African American experience. Houghton Mifflin.
[392]
Truettner, W.H. et al. 1991. The West as America: reinterpreting images of the frontier,  1820-1920. Published for the National Museum of American  Art by the Smithsonian Institution Press.
[393]
Turner, C. 2003. Marketing modernism between the two world wars. University of Massachusetts Press.
[394]
Turner: The Frontier In American History: http://xroads.virginia.edu/~hyper/turner/.
[395]
Twain, M. and Warner, C.D. 1994. The gilded age: a tale of today. Meridian.
[396]
Tyson, T.B. 1998. Robert F. Williams, ‘Black Power,’ and the Roots of the African American Freedom Struggle. The Journal of American History. 85, 2 (Sep. 1998). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/2567750.
[397]
University of Pennsylvania: http://www.upenn.edu/.
[398]
Veblen, T. 1965. The theory of the leisure class. Augustus M. Kelley.
[399]
Vincent de Santis 1963. American Politics in the Gilded Age. The Review of Politics. 25, 4 (1963), 551–561.
[400]
Ward, B. 1998. Just my soul responding: rhythm and blues, black consciousness and  race relations. UCL Press.
[401]
Ward, B. et al. 1996. The making of Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement. Macmillan.
[402]
Ware, S. 1981. Beyond suffrage: women in the New Deal. Harvard University Press.
[403]
Ware, S. 1981. Beyond suffrage: women in the New Deal. Harvard University Press.
[404]
Ware, S. 2015. Game, set, match: billie jean king and the revolution in womens sports. Univ Of North Carolina Pr.
[405]
Warner, S.B. 1978. Streetcar suburbs: the process of growth in Boston, 1870-1900. Harvard University Press.
[406]
Weber, D. 1996. Dark sweat, white gold: California farm workers, cotton, and the New Deal. University of California Press.
[407]
Weiss, N.J. 1983. Farewell to the party of Lincoln: black politics in the age of FDR. Princeton University Press.
[408]
Werner, C.H. 2006. A change is gonna come: music, race & the soul of America. University of Michigan Press.
[409]
White, J. 1990. Black leadership in America: from Booker T. Washington to Jesse  Jackson. Longman.
[410]
White, R. 1991. ‘It’s your misfortune and none of my own’: a new history of the American West. University of Oklahoma Press.
[411]
Whyte, W.H. 1957. The organization man. Cape.
[412]
Wiebe, R.H. 1967. The search for order, 1877-1920. Macmillan.
[413]
Williams, W.A. 1980. Empire as a way of life: an essay on the causes and character of America’s present predicament, along with a few thoughts about an alternative. Oxford University Press.
[414]
Williams, W.A. 1972. The tragedy of American diplomacy. Dell Publishing Co.
[415]
Winkler, A.M. Home Front U.S.A.[electronic resource].
[416]
Wynn, N.A. 1993. The Afro-American and the Second World War. Holmes & Meier.
[417]
X, M. and Haley, A. 2001. The autobiography of Malcolm X. Penguin.
[418]
Zeidel, R.F. Immigrants, progressives, and exclusion politics: the Dillingham Commission, 1900-1927. Northern Illinois University Press.
[419]
Zieger, R.H. America’s Great War: World War I and the American experience. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
[420]
Zunz, O. 1990. Making America corporate 1870-1920. University of Chicago Press.
[421]
(99) Dalton Trumbo HUAC Testimony Excerpt, 1947 - YouTube.
[422]
(99) Howard Lawson HUAC Testimony Excerpt, 1947 - YouTube.
[423]
(99) Mr. Tambourine Man (Live at the Newport Folk Festival. 1964) - YouTube.
[424]
(99) Walt Disney HUAC Testimony Excerpt, 1947 - YouTube.
[425]
1987. A Round Table: Martin Luther King Jr (articles). Journal of American History. 74, 2 (Sep. 1987), 436–481.
[426]
Evans’ Photograph albums for Let us now praise famous men.
[427]
How the Other Half Lives: Studies Among the Tenements of New York : Jacob August Riis.
[428]
Interview Excerpts from Andrew Windyboy, Our Spirits Don’t Speak English (dir. Rich Heape, 2008).
[429]
Janis Joplin Ball & Chain Live At Woodstock 1969 - YouTube.
[430]
Jimi Hendrix - National Anthem U.S.A  (Woodstock 1969) - YouTube.
[431]
Ronald_Reagan HUAC Testimony Excerpt, 1947 - YouTube.
[432]
Stagecoach. Dir. John Ford, sc. Dudley Nichols. With John Wayne & Claire Trevor. United Artists, 1939.
[433]
1987. The Sources of Soviet Conduct. Foreign Affairs. 65, 4 (1987). DOI:https://doi.org/10.2307/20043098.