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Overview
LIBERTY, EQUALITY, POWER offers students a clear, concise understanding of how America transformed itself, in a relatively short time, from a land inhabited by hunter-gatherer and agricultural Native American societies into the most powerful industrial nation on earth. The authors promote this understanding by telling the story of America through the lens of three major themes: liberty, equality, and power. This approach helps students understand not only the effect of the notions of liberty and equality, which are often associated with the American story, but also how dominant and subordinate groups have affected and been affected by the ever-shifting balance of power. LIBERTY, EQUALITY, POWER continues to offer strong political, social, and cultural coverage and valuable pedagogical tools including "History Through Film" to help draw students into the material and show the relevance of history to their own lives. Available in the following split options: LIBERTY, EQUALITY, POWER: A HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, CONCISE SIXTH EDITION Complete, Volume 1: To 1877, and Volume 2: Since 1863.
- New "Visual Link to the Past" features focus on a single piece of art, material culture, or photography that reveals something important about the historical era in which it was produced. Extended captions explore the historical significance of the object and then pose a question for individual assignment or classroom discussion. Topics include "A Southern View of Slavery" (Chapter 9) and "Manifest Destiny" (Chapter 13).
- New "Link to the Past" features spotlight brief primary source excerpts and include a question to involve students in "doing history." Topics include "A City Upon a Hill" (Chapter 2) and "A Slave Mother and the Slave Trade" (Chapter 9).
- Identification lists have been added to the study aids at the end of each chapter.
- The very popular "History Through Film" features encourage students to think critically about what they see on screen and get them thinking about historical questions through a medium with which they are already familiar and comfortable. The features offer summaries of the films, note the interesting historical questions that they intentionally or unintentionally raise (and that students can fruitfully discuss), and offer a commentary on the accuracy or inaccuracy of historical figures and events as seen through the lens of the camera and the vision of the director. Featured films include 1776 (Chapter 5), A MIDWIFE'S TALE (Chapter 8), and AMISTAD (Chapter 11).
- "Discovery" sections at the end of each chapter guide students through the process of analyzing historical sources by taking a second, closer look at selected images, maps, charts, and quotes. Discovery questions provide opportunities for students to practice "doing history." An accompanying introduction at the beginning of the text explains how historians use source materials and encourages students to develop critical-thinking skills.
- The strength of the book's author team accounts for its high-quality narrative and analysis. Among the members of this distinguished team are James McPherson, a Pulitzer Prize winner, and John Murrin, one of the pre-eminent colonial historians today. The concise sixth edition also incorporates the work of coauthor Alice Fahs (University of California, Irvine) who is an accomplished historian of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with special expertise in cultural history and the history of gender.
- LIBERTY, EQUALITY, POWER includes a guide to using maps to help students identify the different types of maps (political, demographic, topographic, and military) and how these maps illustrate various types of information. This overview explains the importance of scale, using a legend, using the captions and topographic elements, as well as using maps for review when studying in order to help students get the most out of the book.
- Map captions highlight the major features and significant relationships between geographical locations, point to specific geographic/topographic features or spatial relationships, and encourage comparison between maps.
- "Musical Link to the Past" features lend an ear to musical movements and musicians of various eras. The features provide brief commentary, quotes from significant lyrics, and a "link" to sound recordings available on CD or accessible online.
2. The Challenge to Spain and the Settlement of North America.
3. England Discovers Its Colonies: Empire, Liberty, and Expansion.
4. Provincial America and the Struggle for a Continent.
5. Reform, Resistance, Revolution.
6. The Revolutionary Republic.
7. Completing the Revolution, 1789-1815.
8. Northern Transformations, 1790-1850.
9. The Old South, 1790-1850.
10. Toward an American Culture.
11. Whigs and Democrats.
12. Antebellum Reform.
13. Manifest Destiny: An Empire for Liberty--or Slavery?
14. The Gathering Tempest, 1853-1860.
15. Secession and Civil War, 1860-1862.
16. A New Birth of Freedom, 1862-1865.
17. Reconstruction, 1863-1877.