A Comparison of the African American Presence in an Early and Later American History Textbook, uses content analysis of texts to alert readers to the omission and distortion of the history of African-Americans, in the hope that this ...
"A compelling theory on the rationale for the changing fortunes of nations"--Publisher's website.
A textbook tracing the political, social, and economic history of the United States from the discovery of America to the present day.
Yuki Tanaka, Japan 's Comfort Women: Prostitution, Exploitation and the U.S. Cover Up (London: Routledge, forthcoming); Dower, Embracing Defeat, 123–29. 34. Chin Sung Chung, “The Origins and Development of the Military Sexual Slavery ...
A series of culture wars are being fought in America today; Lerner, Nagai, and Rothman contend that one key battleground is the nation's high school texts. The authors argue that...
An Absorbing Look at How American History Has Changed in the Telling Over the Last 200 Years Kyle Ward. 57. Cornish and Hughes, History of the United States for Schools, 72. 58. Mary Beth Norton et al., A People and a Nation ... 1982), 88–89.
In the late nineteenth century, New York's Tammany Hall was controlled by “Honest John” Kelly, Richard Croker, and Charles F. Murphy, while Chicago was run by equally colorful characters—“Hinky Dink” Kenna and “Bathhouse” John ...
John R. Swanton, “Social Conditions, Beliefs, and Linguistic Relationship of the Tlingit Indians,” Twenty-sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology for the Years 1904-1905 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office ...
America's History; History of a Free Nation; The American; American Odyssey; America's Past and Promise; ... of the American Textbook Council: D. Ravitch, A Consumer's Guide to High School History Textbooks, Washington, 2004. 22.
John Kenneth Galbraith and John Maynard Keynes have much in COInns] OI). First and foremost, neither of them won the Nobel Prize in economics. Given the view of mainstream economists today neither Keynes nor Galbraith would even make ...