In this new edition, Samuel P. Hays expands the scope of his pioneering account of the ways in which Americans reacted to industrialism during its early years from 1885 to 1914. Hays now deepens his coverage of cultural transformations in a study well known for its concise treatment of political and economic movements. Hays draws on the vast knowledge of America's urban and social history that has been developed over the last thirty-eight years to make the second edition an unusually well-rounded study. He enhances the original coverage of politics, labor, and business with new accounts of the growth of cities, the rise of modern values, cultural conflicts with Native Americans and foreign nations, and changing roles for women, African-Americans, education, religion, medicine, law, and leisure. The result is a tightly woven portrait of America in transition that underscores the effects of impersonal market forces and greater personal freedom on individuals and chronicles such changes as the rise of social inequality, shifting power, in the legal system, the expansion of the federal government, and the formation of the Populist, Progressive, and Socialist parties.
Once industry clustered in the less benign northern environment, technological changes in manufacturing accumulated there.This book portrays the Industrial Revolution as deriving from economic competition within unique political ...
Against a background of rivers, forests, ranges, and public lands, this book defines two conflicting political processes: the demand for an integrated, controlled development guided by an elite group of scientists and technicians and the ...
supply-side economics, 93 survey methods, 25–26, 111–12 survey questions, open-ended, 100 tax cuts, support for, 83, 91, 93 tax dollars: for early childhood education, 59–60, 81–83, 89–90; for economic aid to other countries, 83, 89; ...
Drawing on their experience as government insiders, the authors of this book show how economic policy is shaped at the highest levels of government.
"This book traces the political, economic, social, and cultural phenomena that transformed America from an agrarian, primarily decentralized, moralistic, isolationist nation into an industrial, urban morally liberalized nation involved in ...
... Economic History Association Peter L. Rousseau, American Economic Association Gregor W. Smith, Canadian Economics Association John J. Siegfried Craig Swan. National Bureau of Economic Research 0 F F I c E R 5 Kathleen B. Cooper, ...
Like Bennett Box,J.G. Hoffman Company was a woodworking company, but one at a different place on the production chain. The former played an intermediary role: it took a raw material, lumber, and transformed into a product, ...
These essays help explain the possibilities and limits of human cooperation under severe environmental pressure.
This benchmark volume addresses the debate over the effects of early industrialization on standards of living during the decades before the Civil War.
A definitive history of consumer activism, Buying Power traces the lineage of this political tradition back to our nation’s founding, revealing that Americans used purchasing power to support causes and punish enemies long before the word ...