... Susan Blackmore CONTEMPORARY ART Julian Stallabrass CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY Simon Critchley COSMOLOGY Peter Coles ... Sorell DESIGN John Heskett DINOSAURS David Norman DOCUMENTARY FILM Patricia Aufderheide DREAMING J. Allan Hobson ...
On Warren, see Bernard F. Stanton, George F. Warren, Farm Economist (Cornell University, 2007); Scott Sumner, “Roosevelt, Warren, and the Gold-Buying Program of 1933,” Research in Economic History 20 (2001):135–172; F. A. Pearson, ...
... and Social Movements (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997); Kammen, “Problem.” Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Empire, 1875–1914 (New York: Vintage, 1989). The tradition of regarding America's western territories as a 13. 14.
Alvin Johnson, Pioneer's Progress: An Autobiography (New York: Viking, 252; Bernard M. Baruch, Baruch: The Public Years (New York: Holt, 25ff. Bernard M. Baruch, American Industry in the War: A Report of the War Industries Board (1921) ...
William H. Chafe, The Paradox of Change: American Women in the Twentieth Century (New York: Oxford Univ. Press, 1991), 16; emphasis in the original. 11. See Robyn Muncy, Creating a Female Dominion in American Reform, 1890–1935 (New ...
When a colonial people grow angry at outside control of their affairs, they quite often chafe specifically at economic control, and they normally begin to explain how capitalism itself oppresses them. And criticism of industrial ...
William H. Chafe, The Paradox of Change: American Women in the 20th Century (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991), 71. William A. Sundstrom, ''Last Hired, First Fired? Unemployment and Urban Black Workers During the Great Depression ...
With The Money Makers, Eric Rauchway tells the absorbing story of how FDR and his advisors pulled the levers of monetary policy to save the domestic economy and propel the United States to unprecedented prosperity and superpower status.
This book looks at how this legacy, both for good and ill, informs the current debates around governmental responses to crises.
The history of the most acrimonious presidential handoff in American history -- and of the origins of twentieth-century liberalism and conservatism As historian Eric Rauchway shows in Winter War, FDR laid out coherent, far-ranging plans for ...
Rauchway captures this complexity in a remarkably short space, making this book an ideal introduction to one of the great policy revolutions in history.
Eric Rauchway's brilliant Murdering McKinley restages Leon Czolgosz's hastily conducted trial and then traverses America with Dr. Vernon Briggs, a Boston alienist who sets out to discover why Czolgosz rose up to kill his president.
A cautionary history of globalization by the author of Murdering McKinley identifies what the author believes to be the negative influence of globalization on America, citing the period between the Civil War and the Great Depression as a ...
This book looks at how this legacy, both for good and ill, informs the current debates around governmental responses to crises.
This book looks at how this legacy, both for good and ill, informs the current debates around governmental responses to crises.