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Overview
MAKING AMERICA: A HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, BRIEF SIXTH EDITION, presents history as a dynamic process shaped by human expectations, difficult choices, and often the surprising consequences. With this focus on history as a process, MAKING AMERICA encourages students to think historically and to develop into citizens who value the past. The clear chronology, straightforward narrative, and strong thematic structure emphasize communication over intimidation and appeal to students of varied learning levels. The Brief Sixth Edition retains a hallmark feature of the MAKING AMERICA program: pedagogical tools that allow students to master complex material and enable them to develop analytical skills. Every chapter has chapter outlines, chronologies, focus questions, and on-page glossaries (defining both key terms and general vocabulary) to provide guidance throughout the text; the open, inviting design allows students to access and use pedagogy to improve learning. A wealth of images throughout provides a visual connection to the past, with captions that help students analyze the subject of the painting, photograph, or artifact from an historical point of view. "Investigating America" gets to the heart of learning history: reading and analyzing primary sources. A new feature, "In The Wider World," introduces a global perspective for each chapter. In addition, a new map program provides clear, visually engaging maps with globe insets to put the map in a global context for the student. Available in the following split options: MAKING AMERICA, Brief Sixth Edition Complete, Volume 1: To 1877, and Volume 2: Since 1865.
Available with InfoTrac® Student Collections http://gocengage.com/infotrac.
- A new "In the Wider World" feature introduces a global perspective on the era covered in each chapter.
- A new map program throughout provides clear, visually engaging maps with globe insets to put the map in a global context for the student.
- Material covering the period from 1865 to 1900 has been streamlined--four chapters from the fifth edition (16-19) have been consolidated into three chapters in the sixth edition (16-18). Chapter 16 now focuses largely on the emergence of an industrial economy; Chapter 17 now focuses largely on new social and cultural patterns and changing gender roles; Chapter 18 now focuses centrally on domestic politics and foreign relations.
- Chapter 22 has been reorganized and includes new analysis of First and Second Hundred Days.
- Chapter 29 (formerly Chapter 30) is now titled "Entering a New Century 1992-2010" to reflect the revised and updated coverage and focus.
- The "Investigating America" feature gets students working with two or three primary sources in every chapter, familiarizing them with the basic work of doing history. Topics include Powhatan's Mantle (a visual source); Jefferson's Notes and Slavery, 1785; and Sexuality and Innuendo in Movie Advertising. Each excerpt ends with questions that guide the student in their reading and understanding of the source.
- An open, inviting design with extended margins encourages students' reading and use of pedagogy to improve learning and comprehension.
- "It Matters Today" essays in every chapter show how a person, event, or idea is meaningful today. The questions at the end of each essay prompt readers to consider specific connections between the past, the present, and the future. Topics include Native Americans Shape a New World; Women's Opportunities, Then and Now; and Preventing Another Great Depression.
- To help readers connect with individuals in history and stay interested in the topic at hand, each chapter opens with "Individual Choices," telling the story of a key person in history. Featured people include Wahunsunacock, Nathanial Bacon, Esther DeBerdt Reed, and Jackie Robinson.
- Focus questions at the beginning of the chapter's major sections guide readers to the most important themes in each section and connect moments in U.S. history to relevant events in global history.
- The on-page glossary defines key terms, concepts, and vocabulary right on the page where the term first appears, giving readers confidence, knowledge, and a quick tool to review. Terms include not just famous individuals and important concepts but also words that may be unfamiliar to readers such as icon, cash crops, dissenters, naturalized, and spendthrift.
2. A Continent on the Move, 1400-1725.
3. Founding the English Mainland Colonies, 1585-1732.
4. The English Colonies in the Eighteenth Century, 1689-1763.
5. Deciding Where Loyalties Lie, 1763-1776.
6. Recreating America: Independence and a New Nation, 1775-1783.
7. Competing Visions of the Virtuous Republic, 1770-1796.
8. The Early Republic, 1796-1804.
9. Increasing Conflict and War, 1805-1815.
10. The Rise of a New Nation, 1815-1836.
11. The Great Transformation: Growth and Expansion, 1828-1848.
12. Responses to the Great Transformation, 1828-1848.
13. Sectional Conflict and Shattered Union, 1848-1860.
14. A Violent Choice: Civil War, 1861-1865.
15. Reconstruction: High Hopes and Shattered Dreams, 1865-1877.
16. The Nation Industrializes, 1865-1900.
17. Life in the Gilded Age, 1865-1900.
18. Politics and Foreign Relations in a Rapidly Changing Nation, 1865-1902.
19. The Progressive Era, 1900-1917.
20. The United States in a World at War, 1913-1920.
21. Prosperity Decade, 1920-1928.
22. The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1939.
23. America's Rise to World Leadership, 1929-1945.
24. Truman and Cold War America, 1945-1952.
25. Quest for Consensus, 1952-1960.
26. Great Promises, Bitter Disappointments, 1960-1968.
27. America Under Stress, 1967-1976.
28. New Economic and Political Alignments, 1976-1992.
29. Entering a New Century, 1992-2010.