Unfinished Nation A Concise History of the American People 8th Edition Alan Brinkley Test Bank

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Product Details:

  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780073513331
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0073513331
  • Author: Alan Brinkley

Known for its balanced voice and approachable scholarship, Alan Brinkley’s best-selling The Unfinished Nation offers a concise, yet thorough survey of American History appropriate for students at all levels. The 8th edition features new scholarship and updated discussions, most significantly on the topics of War, American Imperialism, and Globalization.

Brinkley’s accessible narrative is available as a digital SmartBook™,a personalized eBook that enhances understanding by asking students to demonstrate comprehension as they read. It is also supported by engaging digital tools, such as interactive maps, that encourage critical thinking and retention of key course concepts.

 

Table of Content:

Debating the Past: The American Population Before ColumbusAmerica in the World: The Atlantic Context of Early American History America in the World: Mercantilism and Colonial CommerceConsider the Source: Bartolome de las Casas, “Of the Island of Hispaniola”Debating the Past: Native Americans and “The Middle Ground”Consider the Source: Cotton Mather on the Recent History of New England Debating the Past: The Origins of SlaveryDebating the Past: The Witchcraft TrialsConsider the Source: Gottlieb Mittleburger, the Passage of Indentured ServantsAmerica in the World: The First Global WarPatterns of Popular Culture: Taverns in Revolutionary MassachusettsConsider the Source: Benjamin Franklin, Testimony against the Stamp Act Debating the Past: The American RevolutionAmerica in the World: The Age of Revolutions Consider the Source: Abigail Adams discusses women’s rightsDebating the Past: The Background of the ConstitutionConsider the Source: Washington’s Farewell AddressAmerica in the World: The Global Industrial Revolution Patterns of Popular Culture: Horse RacingConsider the Source: Thomas Jefferson to Meriwether Lewis, June 1803Consider the Source: Thomas Jefferson Reacts to the Missouri CompromiseDebating the Past: Jacksonian DemocracyPatterns of Popular Culture: The Penny PressConsider the Source: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in AmericaPatterns of Popular Culture: Shakespeare in AmericaConsider the Source: The Baltimore Patriot Supports Government Regulation of Telegraphy Debating the Past: The Character of SlaveryConsider the Source: Senator James Henry Hammond Declares “Cotton Is King”America in the World: The Abolition of SlaveryConsider the Source: Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Seneca Fall, NY, 1848 Consider the Source: Wilmot Proviso to the Northwest Ordinance, 1846Debating the Past: The Causes of the Civil WarPatterns of Popular Culture: Baseball and the Civil WarConsider the SourceDebating the Past: ReconstructionConsider the Source: Southern Blacks Ask for HelpDebating the Past: The Frontier and the WestConsider the Source: Walter Baron von Richthofen, Cattle Raising on the Plains in North AmericaPatterns of Popular Culture: The Novels of Horatio AlgerConsider the Source: Andrew Carnegie Explains the Gospel of Wealth, 1889America in the World: Global MigrationsConsider the Source: John Wanamaker, The Four Cardinal Points of the Department Store, 1911Debating the Past: PopulismAmerica in the World: ImperialismConsider the Source: Platform of the American Anti-Imperialist LeagueDebating the Past: ProgressivismAmerica in the World: Social DemocracyConsider the Source: Katherine Philips Edson Boasts of Women’s Influence on State Legislation, 1913Patterns of Popular Culture: Billy Sunday and Modern RevivalismConsider the Source: George M. Cohan, “Over There,” 1918 America in the World: The CinemaConsider the Source: Black Swan Records Advertisement in the Newspaper Crisis, 1922Debating the Past: Causes of the Great DepressionAmerica in the World: The Global DepressionConsider the Source: Mr. Tarver Remembers the Great Depression in a 1940 Interview with the Federal Writers ProjectDebating the Past: The New DealPatterns of Popular Culture: The Golden Age of Comic BooksConsider the Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Speaks on the Reorganization of the Judiciary, 1937 Debating the Past: The Question of Pearl HarborAmerica in the World: The Sino-Japanese War, 1931-1941Consider the Source: Joint Statement by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill, 1941Debating the Past: The Decision to Drop the Atomic BombConsider the Source: Marjorie Haselton Writes Her Husband Richard in China, 1945Debating the Past: The Cold War Debating the Past: McCarthyismConsider the Source: National Security Council Paper No. 68 (NSC-68) Arms America, 1950Patterns of Popular Culture: Lucy and DesiConsider the Source: Eisenhower Warns of the Military Industrial Complex in His Farewell Address, 1961Debating the Past: The Civil Rights MovementDebating the Past: The Vietnam CommitmentAmerica in the World: 1968 Consider the Source: Martin Luther King, Jr., “I Have a Dream”Debating the Past: Watergate America in the World: The End of ColonialismConsider the Source: Demands of the New York High School Student Union, 1970Patterns of Popular Culture: The MallConsider the Source: James Watt, “Despite Critics, Interior Dept. Makes Rapid Progress,” Human Events, 1982America in the World: The Global Environmental MovementConsider the Source: “Keep Foreign Terrorism Foreign,” New York Times, 1993

 

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