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| Maps | p. xvii |
| History through film | p. xvii |
| To the Student: Why Study History? | p. xix |
| Preface | p. xxi |
| Reconstruction, 1863-1877 | p. 625 |
| Wartime Reconstruction | p. 625 |
| Chronology | p. 626 |
| Radical Republicans and Reconstruction | p. 627 |
| Andrew Johnson and Reconstruction | p. 628 |
| Johnson's Policy | p. 629 |
| Southern Defiance | p. 630 |
| The Black Codes | p. 631 |
| Land and Labor in the Postwar South | p. 631 |
| The Freedmen's Bureau | p. 632 |
| Land for the Landless | p. 632 |
| Education | p. 634 |
| The Advent of Congressional Reconstruction | p. 634 |
| Schism between President and Congress | p. 635 |
| The 14th Amendment | p. 635 |
| The 1866 Elections | p. 636 |
| The Reconstruction Acts of 1867 | p. 636 |
| The Impeachment of Andrew Johnson | p. 638 |
| The Completion of Formal Reconstruction | p. 539 |
| The 15th Amendment | p. 640 |
| The Election of 1868 | p. 640 |
| The Grant Administration | p. 641 |
| Civil Service Reform | p. 642 |
| Foreign Policy Issues | p. 643 |
| Reconstruction in the South | p. 644 |
| Blacks in Office | p. 644 |
| "Carpetbaggers" | p. 645 |
| "Scalawags" | p. 646 |
| The Ku Klux Klan | p. 646 |
| History Through Film The Birth of a Nation | p. 648 |
| The Election of 1872 | p. 648 |
| The Panic of 1873 | p. 650 |
| The Retreat from Reconstruction | p. 650 |
| The Mississippi Election of 1875 | p. 652 |
| The Supreme Court and Reconstruction | p. 653 |
| The Election of 1876 | p. 653 |
| Disputed Results | p. 654 |
| The Compromise of 1877 | p. 655 |
| The End of Reconstruction | p. 656 |
| Conclusion | p. 656 |
| A Transformed Nation: The West and the New South, 1865-1900 | p. 659 |
| The Homestead Act | p. 659 |
| Chronology | p. 660 |
| An Industrializing West | p. 661 |
| Railroads | p. 662 |
| Chinese Laborers and the Railroads | p. 663 |
| The Golden Spike | p. 664 |
| Railroads and Borderlands Communities | p. 665 |
| Mining | p. 666 |
| Ranching | p. 667 |
| History Through Film Oklahoma! | p. 668 |
| Cattle Drives and the Open Range | p. 668 |
| The industrialization of Ranching | p. 671 |
| Industrial Cowboys | p. 671 |
| Mexican Americans | p. 671 |
| Itinerant Laborers | p. 672 |
| Homesteading and Farming | p. 673 |
| The Experience of Homesteading | p. 673 |
| Gender and Western Settlement | p. 675 |
| Conquest and Resistance: American Indians in the Trans-Mississippi West | p. 675 |
| Conflict with the Sioux | p. 676 |
| Suppression of Other Plains Indians | p. 677 |
| The "Peace Policy" | p. 678 |
| The Dawes Severalty Act and Indian Boarding Schools | p. 679 |
| The Ghost Dance | p. 680 |
| Sitting Bull and Buffalo Bill: Popular Myths of the West | p. 680 |
| Industrialization and the New South | p. 682 |
| Race and Industrialization | p. 683 |
| Southern Agriculture | p. 683 |
| Exodusters and Emigrationists | p. 684 |
| Race Relations in the New South | p. 685 |
| The Emergence of an African American Middle Class | p. 686 |
| The Rise of Jim Crow | p. 686 |
| The Politics of Stalemate | p. 689 |
| Knife-Edge Electoral Balance | p. 689 |
| Civil Service Reform | p. 690 |
| The Tariff Issue | p. 692 |
| Conclusion | p. 692 |
| The Emergence of Corporate America, 1865-1900 | p. 695 |
| Chronology | p. 696 |
| An Expansive and Volatile Economy | p. 697 |
| Engines of Economic Growth | p. 698 |
| Technological Innovation and Celebrations of the Machine | p. 699 |
| Changes in Business Organization and Practice | p. 700 |
| Wealth and Society | p. 703 |
| Class Distinction and Cultural Hierarchy | p. 704 |
| The Consolidation of Middle-class Culture | p. 704 |
| White-Collar Workers | p. 705 |
| The Middle-class Home | p. 706 |
| Department Stores as Middle-class Communities of Taste | p. 706 |
| Domesticity vs. Work | p. 707 |
| The Women's Club Movement and Public Lives | p. 708 |
| The New Woman | p. 708 |
| Higher Education and Professional Organizations | p. 709 |
| Middle-class Cultural Institutions | p. 709 |
| Racial Hierarchy and the City: The 1893 Columbian Exhibition | p. 711 |
| The City and Working-class Culture | p. 713 |
| Working-class Women and Men | p. 713 |
| Commercial Amusements | p. 713 |
| Popular Literature | p. 714 |
| Emergence of a National Culture | p. 715 |
| Advertising | p. 715 |
| A Shared Visual Culture | p. 716 |
| Mail-order Catalogues | p. 717 |
| Workers' Resistance to the New Corporate Order | p. 718 |
| The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 | p. 719 |
| The Knights of Labor | p. 719 |
| Haymarket | p. 720 |
| The Homestead Strike | p. 721 |
| The Depression of 1893-1897 | p. 722 |
| The Pullman Strike | p. 723 |
| Farmers' Movements | p. 724 |
| Resistance to Railroads | p. 724 |
| Credit and Money | p. 726 |
| The Greenback and Silver Movements | p. 727 |
| Grangers and the Farmers' Alliance | p. 728 |
| The Rise and Fall of the People's Party | p. 729 |
| The Silver Issue | p. 730 |
| The Election of 1896 | p. 731 |
| Conclusion | p. 732 |
| An Industrial Society, 1900-1920 | p. 735 |
| Chronology | p. 736 |
| Sources of Economic Growth | p. 736 |
| Technology | p. 737 |
| Corporate Growth | p. 738 |
| Mass Production and Distribution | p. 738 |
| Corporate Consolidation | p. 739 |
| Revolution in Management | p. 740 |
| Scientific Management on the Factory Floor | p. 741 |
| "Robber Barons" No More | p. 744 |
| Obsession with Physical and Racial Fitness | p. 745 |
| Immigration | p. 746 |
| European Immigration | p. 747 |
| Chinese and Japanese Immigration | p. 749 |
| Immigrant Labor | p. 751 |
| Living Conditions | p. 753 |
| Building Ethnic Communities | p. 754 |
| A Network of Institutions | p. 754 |
| The Emergence of an Ethnic Middle Class | p. 754 |
| Political Machines and Organized Crime | p. 756 |
| African American Labor and Community | p. 758 |
| History Through Film The Jazz Singer | p. 760 |
| Workers and Unions | p. 762 |
| Samuel F. Gompers and the AFL | p. 762 |
| "Big Bill" Haywood and the IWW | p. 754 |
| The Joys of the City | p. 766 |
| The New Sexuality and the Rise of Feminism | p. 767 |
| Feminism | p. 767 |
| Conclusion | p. 769 |
| Progressivism | p. 771 |
| Progressivism and the Protestant Spirit | p. 771 |
| Chronology | p. 772 |
| Muckrakers, Magazines, and the Turn toward "Realism" | p. 773 |
| Settlement Houses and Women's Activism | p. 775 |
| Hull House | p. 776 |
| The Cultural Conservatism of Progressive Reformers | p. 778 |
| A Nation of Clubwomen | p. 780 |
| Socialism and Progressivism | p. 781 |
| The Many Faces of Socialism | p. 781 |
| Socialists and Progressives | p. 782 |
| Municipal Reform | p. 783 |
| The City Commission Plan | p. 783 |
| The City Manager Plan | p. 783 |
| The Costs of Reform | p. 784 |
| Political Reform in the States | p. 784 |
| Restoring Sovereignty to "the People" | p. 785 |
| Creating a Virtuous Electorate | p. 785 |
| The Australian Ballot | p. 785 |
| Personal Registration Laws | p. 786 |
| Disenfranchisement | p. 786 |
| Disillusionment with the Electorate | p. 788 |
| Woman Suffrage | p. 788 |
| Economic and Social Reform in the States | p. 789 |
| Robert La Follette and Wisconsin Progressivism | p. 790 |
| Progressive Reform in New York | p. 791 |
| A Renewed Campaign for Civil Rights | p. 792 |
| The Failure of Accommodationism | p. 792 |
| From the Niagara Movement to the NAACP | p. 793 |
| National Reform | p. 795 |
| The Roosevelt Presidency | p. 796 |
| Regulating the Trusts | p. 796 |
| Toward a "Square Deal" | p. 797 |
| Expanding Government Power: The Economy | p. 797 |
| Expanding Government Power: The Environment | p. 797 |
| Progressivism: A Movement for the People? | p. 799 |
| The Republicans: A Divided Party | p. 799 |
| The Taft Presidency | p. 800 |
| Battling Congress | p. 800 |
| The Ballinger-Pinchot Controversy | p. 800 |
| Roosevelt's Return | p. 801 |
| The Bull Moose Campaign | p. 802 |
| The Rise of Woodrow Wilson | p. 802 |
| The Election of 1912 | p. 803 |
| The Wilson Presidency | p. 804 |
| Tariff Reform and a Progressive Income Tax | p. 804 |
| The Federal Reserve Act | p. 804 |
| From the New Freedom to the New Nationalism | p. 805 |
| Conclusion | p. 807 |
| Becoming a World Power, 1898-1917 | p. 809 |
| Chronology | p. 810 |
| The United States Looks Abroad | p. 810 |
| Protestant Missionaries | p. 810 |
| Businessmen | p. 811 |
| Imperialists | p. 812 |
| The Spanish-American War | p. 814 |
| "A Splendid Little War" | p. 817 |
| The United States Becomes a World Power | p. 821 |
| The Debate over the Treaty of Paris | p. 822 |
| The American-Filipino War | p. 823 |
| Controlling Cuba and Puerto Rico | p. 824 |
| China and the "Open Door" | p. 826 |
| Theodore Roosevelt, Geopolitician | p. 828 |
| The Roosevelt Corollary | p. 829 |
| The Panama Canal | p. 829 |
| Keeping the Peace in East Asia | p. 832 |
| William Howard Taft, Dollar Diplomat | p. 834 |
| Woodrow Wilson, Struggling Idealist | p. 835 |
| Conclusion | p. 837 |
| War and Society, 1914-1920 | p. 839 |
| Europe's Descent into War | p. 840 |
| Chronology | p. 840 |
| American Neutrality | p. 842 |
| Submarine Warfare | p. 843 |
| The Peace Movement | p. 845 |
| Wilson's Vision: "Peace without Victory" | p. 845 |
| German Escalation | p. 847 |
| American Intervention | p. 848 |
| Mobilizing for "Total" War | p. 850 |
| Organizing Industry | p. 851 |
| Securing Workers, Keeping Labor Peace | p. 852 |
| Raising an Army | p. 853 |
| Paying the Bills | p. 856 |
| Arousing Patriotic Ardor | p. 856 |
| Wartime Repression | p. 857 |
| The Failure of the International Peace | p. 861 |
| The Paris Peace Conference and the Treaty of Versailles | p. 861 |
| The League of Nations | p. 862 |
| Wilson versus Lodge: The Fight over Ratification | p. 864 |
| The Treaty's Final Defeat | p. 866 |
| The Postwar Period: A Society in Convulsion | p. 867 |
| Labor-Capital Conflict | p. 867 |
| Radicals and the Red Scare | p. 868 |
| History Through Film Reds | p. 870 |
| Racial Conflict and the Rise of Black Nationalism | p. 871 |
| Conclusion | p. 873 |
| The 1920s | p. 875 |
| Prosperity | p. 875 |
| Chronology | p. 876 |
| A Consumer Society | p. 877 |
| A People's Capitalism | p. 878 |
| The Rise of Advertising and Mass Marketing | p. 878 |
| Changing Attitudes toward Marriage and Sexuality | p. 881 |
| An Age of Celebrity | p. 881 |
| Celebrating Business Civilisation | p. 882 |
| Industrial Workers | p. 883 |
| Women and Work | p. 885 |
| The Women's Movement Adrift | p. 887 |
| The Politics of Business | p. 888 |
| Harding and the Politics of Personal Gain | p. 888 |
| Coolidge and Laissez-Faire Politics | p. 890 |
| Hoover and the Politics of Associationalism | p. 891 |
| The Politics of Business Abroad | p. 892 |
| Farmers, Small-Town Protestants, and Moral Traditionalists | p. 893 |
| Agricultural Depression | p. 894 |
| Cultural Dislocation | p. 895 |
| Prohibition | p. 897 |
| The Ku Klux Klan | p. 897 |
| Immigration Restriction | p. 898 |
| Fundamentalism versus Liberal Protestantism | p. 900 |
| The Scopes Trial | p. 901 |
| History Through Film Inherit the Wind | p. 902 |
| Ethnic and Racial Communities | p. 904 |
| European American Ethnics | p. 905 |
| African Americans | p. 907 |
| The Harlem Renaissance | p. 910 |
| Mexican Americans | p. 911 |
| The "Lost Generation" and Disillusioned Intellectuals | p. 914 |
| Democracy on the Defensive | p. 915 |
| Conclusion | p. 916 |
| The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1939 | p. 919 |
| Chronology | p. 920 |
| Causes of the Great Depression | p. 920 |
| Stock Market Speculation | p. 921 |
| Mistakes by the Federal Reserve Board | p. 921 |
| An Ill-Advised Tariff | p. 921 |
| A Maldistribution of Wealth | p. 922 |
| Hoover: The Fall of a Self-Made Man | p. 923 |
| Hoover's Program | p. 924 |
| The Bonus Army | p. 925 |
| A Culture in Crisis | p. 926 |
| The Democratic Roosevelt | p. 928 |
| An Early Life of Privilege | p. 928 |
| Roosevelt Liberalism | p. 929 |
| The First New Deal, 1933-1935 | p. 929 |
| Saving the Banks | p. 932 |
| Economic Relief | p. 932 |
| Agricultural Reform | p. 933 |
| Industrial Reform | p. 935 |
| Rebuilding the Nation's Infrastructure | p. 937 |
| The TVA Alternative | p. 937 |
| The New Deal and Western Development | p. 938 |
| Political Mobilization, Political Unrest, 1934-1935 | p. 940 |
| Populist Critics of the New Deal | p. 941 |
| Labor Protests | p. 942 |
| Anger at the Polls | p. 943 |
| Radical Third Parties | p. 943 |
| The Second New Deal, 1935-1937 | p. 944 |
| Philosophical Underpinnings | p. 944 |
| Legislation | p. 945 |
| Victory in 1936: The New Democratic Coalition | p. 945 |
| Rhetoric Versus Reality | p. 947 |
| Men, Women, and Reform | p. 948 |
| Labor in Politics and Culture | p. 952 |
| America's Minorities and the New Deal | p. 954 |
| Eastern and Southern European Ethnics | p. 954 |
| African Americans | p. 954 |
| Mexican Americans | p. 955 |
| American Indians | p. 956 |
| The New Deal Abroad | p. 957 |
| Stalemate, 1937-1940 | p. 959 |
| The Court-Packing Fiasco | p. 959 |
| The Recession of 1937-1938 | p. 960 |
| Conclusion | p. 960 |
| America during the Second World War | p. 963 |
| The Road to War: Aggression and Response | p. 963 |
| Chronology | p. 964 |
| The Rise of Aggressor States | p. 964 |
| U.S. Neutrality | p. 965 |
| The Mounting Crisis | p. 956 |
| The Outbreak of War in Europe | p. 967 |
| The U.S. Response to War in Europe | p. 968 |
| An "Arsenal of Democracy" | p. 972 |
| Pearl Harbor | p. 973 |
| Fighting the War in Europe | p. 974 |
| Campaigns in North Africa and Italy | p. 976 |
| Operation Overlord | p. 977 |
| The Pacific Theater | p. 979 |
| Seizing the Offensive in the Pacific | p. 979 |
| China Policy | p. 980 |
| U.S. Strategy in the Pacific | p. 980 |
| A New President, the Atomic Bomb, and Japan's Surrender | p. 982 |
| The War at Home: The Economy | p. 985 |
| Government's Role in the Economy | p. 986 |
| Business and Finance | p. 986 |
| The Workforce | p. 988 |
| The Labor Front | p. 990 |
| Assessing Economic Change | p. 991 |
| A New Role for Government? | p. 991 |
| The War at Home: Social Issues and Social Movements | p. 992 |
| Selling the War | p. 992 |
| History Through Film Casablanca | p. 994 |
| Gender Issues | p. 996 |
| Racial Issues | p. 998 |
| Social Movements | p. 1001 |
| Shaping the Peace | p. 1003 |
| International Organizations | p. 1004 |
| Spheres of Interest and Postwar Settlements | p. 1005 |
| Conclusion | p. 1007 |
| The Age of Containment, 1946-1953 | p. 1009 |
| Creating a National Security State, 1945-1949 | p. 1009 |
| Chronology | p. 1010 |
| Onset of the Cold War | p. 1010 |
| Containment Abroad: The Truman Doctrine | p. 1012 |
| Truman's Loyalty Program | p. 1013 |
| The National Security Act, the Marshall Plan, and the Berlin Crisis | p. 1014 |
| The Election of 1948 | p. 1016 |
| The Era of the Korean War, 1949-1952 | p. 1018 |
| NATO, China, and the Bomb | p. 1018 |
| NSC-68 | p. 1019 |
| The Korean War | p. 1020 |
| Korea and Containment | p. 1022 |
| Pursuing National Security at Home | p. 1025 |
| Anticommunism and the U.S. Labor Movement | p. 1025 |
| HUAC and the Search for Subversives | p. 1026 |
| Targeting Difference | p. 1029 |
| The "Great Fear" | p. 1030 |
| McCarthyism | p. 1032 |
| The National Security Constitution | p. 1033 |
| Truman's Fair Deal | p. 1034 |
| The Employment Act of 1946 and the Promise of Economic Growth | p. 1034 |
| Shaping the Fair Deal | p. 1036 |
| Civil Rights | p. 1038 |
| Signs of a Changing Culture | p. 1040 |
| The Baseball "Color Line" | p. 1040 |
| New Suburban Developments | p. 1042 |
| Postwar Hollywood | p. 1044 |
| From Truman to Eisenhower | p. 1046 |
| The Election of 1952 | p. 1047 |
| A Soldier-Politician | p. 1047 |
| Conclusion | p. 1048 |
| Affluence and Its Discontents, 1953-1963 | p. 1051 |
| Foreign Policy, 1953-1960 | p. 1051 |
| Eisenhower Takes Command | p. 1051 |
| Chronology | p. 1052 |
| The New Look, Global Alliances, and Summitry | p. 1054 |
| Covert Action and Economic Leverage | p. 1056 |
| The United States and Third World Politics, 1953-1960 | p. 1057 |
| Latin America | p. 1057 |
| The Middle East, Asia, and Africa | p. 1058 |
| Vietnam | p. 1059 |
| Affluence: A "People of Plenty" | p. 1060 |
| Economic Growth | p. 1061 |
| Highways and Waterways | p. 1063 |
| Labor-Management Accord | p. 1064 |
| Political Pluralism | p. 1066 |
| A Religious People | p. 1066 |
| Discontents of Affluence | p. 1068 |
| Conformity in an Affluent Society | p. 1069 |
| Restive Youth | p. 1070 |
| The Mass Culture Debate | p. 1072 |
| Changing Gender Politics | p. 1073 |
| The New Suburbs and Gender Ideals | p. 1073 |
| Signs of Women's Changing Roles | p. 1075 |
| The Fight against Discrimination, 1953-1960 | p. 1076 |
| The Brown Cases, 1954-1955 | p. 1076 |
| The Montgomery Bus Boycott and Martin Luther King, Jr. | p. 1079 |
| The Politics of Civil Rights: From the Local to the Global | p. 1080 |
| American Indian Policy | p. 1082 |
| The Growth of Spanish-Speaking Populations | p. 1083 |
| Urban-Suburban Issues | p. 1085 |
| Debating the Role of Government, 1955-1960 | p. 1086 |
| The New Conservatives | p. 1086 |
| Advocates of a More Active Government | p. 1088 |
| The Kennedy Years: Foreign Policy | p. 1091 |
| The Election of 1960 | p. 1091 |
| Kennedy's Foreign Policy Goals | p. 1093 |
| Cuba and Berlin | p. 1093 |
| Southeast Asia and "Flexible Response" | p. 1095 |
| The Kennedy Years: Domestic Policy | p. 1096 |
| Policy Making During the Early 1960s | p. 1097 |
| The Civil-Rights Movement, 1960-1963 | p. 1097 |
| Women's Issues | p. 1099 |
| The Assassination of John F. Kennedy | p. 1100 |
| Conclusion | p. 1100 |
| America during Its Longest War, 1963-1974 | p. 1103 |
| The Great Society | p. 1103 |
| Chronology | p. 1104 |
| Closing the New Frontier | p. 1105 |
| The Election of 1964 | p. 1107 |
| Lyndon Johnson's Great Society | p. 1109 |
| Evaluating the Great Society | p. 1110 |
| Escalation in Vietnam | p. 1112 |
| The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution | p. 1112 |
| The War Continues to Widen | p. 1114 |
| The Media and the War | p. 1117 |
| The War at Home | p. 1118 |
| The Movement of Movements | p. 1118 |
| Movements on College Campuses: A New Left | p. 1120 |
| The Counterculture | p. 1122 |
| African American Social Movements | p. 1124 |
| History Through Film Malcolm X | p. 1124 |
| The Antiwar Movement | p. 1129 |
| 1968 | p. 1132 |
| Turmoil in Vietnam | p. 1132 |
| Turmoil at Home | p. 1133 |
| The Election of 1968 | p. 1135 |
| The Nixon Years, 1969-1974 | p. 1136 |
| Lawbreaking and Violence | p. 1135 |
| A New President | p. 1137 |
| The Economy | p. 1137 |
| Social Policy | p. 1138 |
| Environmentalism | p. 1140 |
| Controversies over Rights | p. 1140 |
| Foreign Policy under Nixon and Kissinger | p. 1143 |
| Detente and Normalization | p. 1144 |
| Vietnamization | p. 1144 |
| The Aftermath of War | p. 1146 |
| Expanding the Nixon Doctrine | p. 1147 |
| The Wars of Watergate | p. 1148 |
| The Election of 1972 | p. 1149 |
| Nixon Pursued | p. 1150 |
| Nixon's Final Days | p. 1151 |
| Conclusion | p. 1152 |
| Power and Politics, 1974-1992 | p. 1155 |
| The Caretaker Presidency of Gerald Ford (1974-1977) | p. 1155 |
| Chronology | p. 1156 |
| Trying to Whip Inflation | p. 1157 |
| Foreign Policy | p. 1157 |
| The Election of 1976 | p. 1158 |
| Jimmy Carter's One-Term Presidency (1977-1981) | p. 1158 |
| Welfare and Energy Initiatives | p. 1159 |
| A Faltering Economy | p. 1160 |
| Negotiating Disputes Overseas | p. 1161 |
| Campaigning for Human Rights Abroad | p. 1161 |
| Confronting Problems in Iran and Afghanistan | p. 1162 |
| A New Right | p. 1163 |
| Ronald Reagan (1981-1989) | p. 1165 |
| The Election of 1980 | p. 1166 |
| A "New Morning in America" | p. 1167 |
| Taxes, Supply-Side Economics, and the "Reagan Revolution" | p. 1168 |
| Cutting Regulations and Welfare Measures | p. 1170 |
| Routing the Democrats, 1984 | p. 1172 |
| Reagan's Second Term | p. 1173 |
| History Through Film the First Moviestar President | p. 1174 |
| Renewing the Cold War | p. 1176 |
| The Defense Buildup | p. 1176 |
| Deploying Military Power | p. 1177 |
| The Iran-Contra Controversy | p. 1178 |
| The Beginning of the End of the Cold War | p. 1179 |
| The First Bush Presidency (1989-1993) | p. 1180 |
| The Election of 1988 | p. 1180 |
| The End of the Cold War | p. 1181 |
| The Persian Gulf War | p. 1183 |
| The Election of 1992 | p. 1184 |
| Movement Activism | p. 1185 |
| Women's Issues | p. 1187 |
| Sexual Politics | p. 1189 |
| Race, Ethnicity, and Social Activism | p. 1191 |
| Activism Among African Americans | p. 1192 |
| Activism Among American Indians | p. 1193 |
| Activism in Spanish-Speaking Communities | p. 1195 |
| Activism Among Asian Americans | p. 1198 |
| The Dilemmas of Antidiscrimination Efforts | p. 1199 |
| Conclusion | p. 1201 |
| Economic, Social, and Cultural Change in the Late 20th Century | p. 1203 |
| A Changing People | p. 1203 |
| An Aging, Shifting Population | p. 1203 |
| Chronology | p. 1204 |
| New Immigration | p. 1206 |
| The Metropolitan Nation | p. 1209 |
| Economic Change | p. 1211 |
| New Technologies | p. 1211 |
| Big Business | p. 1212 |
| Postindustrial Restructuring | p. 1213 |
| The Sports-Entertainment Complex | p. 1216 |
| Media and Popular Culture | p. 1219 |
| The Video Revolution | p. 1219 |
| The "New Hollywood" | p. 1220 |
| The Changing Media Environment | p. 1222 |
| The New Mass Culture Debate | p. 1223 |
| Another "Great Awakening" | p. 1225 |
| Conclusion | p. 1229 |
| Politics of Hope and Fear, 1993-2007 | p. 1231 |
| The Presidency of Bill Clinton (1993-2001) | p. 1231 |
| Clinton's First Two Years | p. 1232 |
| Chronology | p. 1232 |
| A Republican Congress, a Democratic White House | p. 1233 |
| Victory and Impeachment | p. 1235 |
| Environmental Policy | p. 1237 |
| Post-Cold War Foreign Policy | p. 1238 |
| Globalization | p. 1240 |
| The Presidency of George W. Bush (2001-2007) | p. 1241 |
| The Long Election | p. 1241 |
| A Conservative Domestic Agenda | p. 1243 |
| Foreign Policy Changes Course | p. 1244 |
| Activism at Home during the Second Term | p. 1249 |
| The Politics of National Security during the Second Term | p. 1253 |
| Conclusion | p. 1257 |
| Appendix | p. A-1 |
| Glossary | p. G-1 |
| Credits | p. C-1 |
| Index | p. I-1 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |