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1. History as Social Science
A. Understanding the present through analysis of the past
B. The study of history: methods of inquiry, primary and secondary sources, analysis and critical thinking
2. Defining Race, Ethnicity and Gender
A. Race & gender: biological imperatives or social constructs
B. Ethnicity: phenotypically or culturally determined
C. Minority group: numbers or relationship to power
D. Ethnocentrism in a pluralistic society
E. E Pluribus Unum: "Melting Pot" or "Salad Bowl"
3. Pre-Columbian America
A. The diverse cultures of Native America
B. Impact of Euro/African invasion on indigenous cultures
4. Colonial America in the Age of Empire
A. Spanish, French and English settlement
1. Cooperation with and conquest of indigenous peoples
2. Slavery and empire
B. Protestant Reformation and English America
1. English identity in the wake of the Reformation
2. Puritan New England: religion, family and community
3. The Chesapeake: commercial enterprise, individualism and profit
5. Africans in America: Slavery and the Atlantic World
A. The Atlantic slave trade
B. Indentured servitude and chattel slavery in early Virginia
C. Slavery and the British mainland colonies
6. Race and Republicanism
A. Declaration of Independence: its meaning and legacy
B. The Constitution and slavery
C. Race and national identity following the Revolution
D. Naturalization Act of 1790
E. Red, white and black in Jeffersonian America
7. Race, Class and Gender in the Market Economy
A. Cotton kingdom and the spread of slavery
B. Indian removal in the Age of Jackson
C. Rise of the factory and the "Cult of Domesticity"
D. Abolition and the birth of women's rights
1. Women and the abolitionist crusade
2. Seneca Falls & the Declaration of Sentiments
8. Immigration in Antebellum America
A. The Irish experience
B. The German experience
9. Race and Manifest Destiny
A. Conquest of Mexico: the Mexican American War
B. Foreigners in their own land: Mexican Americans & the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
C. "Climbing Gold Mountain": the Chinese Experience
10. Civil War and Emancipation
A. War for Union/War against slavery
B. Abraham Lincoln and the Emancipation Proclamation
11. Race and Reaction: the Failure of Reconstruction
A. 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments
B. Black suffrage versus women's suffrage
C. White supremacy and the "New South"
D. Plessy v. Ferguson, 1896
12. Reservations and Resistance
A. The "Iron Horse" and the "End of the Frontier"
B. Dawes Act, 1887
C. Wounded Knee, 1890
13. Immigration 1880 - 1930
A. The Japanese experience
B. The Jewish experience
C. The Mexican experience
14 .Politics of Exclusion 1880 - 1930
A. Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882
B. Gentleman's Agreement, 1907
C. National Origins Act, 1924
15. Migration and Political Realignments
A. America Moves to the City: 1880 - 1920
B. Southern Blacks and the Great Migration, 1910 - 1930
1. World War I and the "New Negro"
2. Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association
3. Harlem Renaissance
C. El Norte: Mexican Immigration and the Capitalist West
D. Great Depression and Dust Bowl Migrants
E. Great Depression and Mexican Repatriation
F. Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal
1. New Deal liberalism and an emerging Democratic majority
2. Labor and minorities in the New Deal coalition
3. Indian Reorganization Act, 1934
16. World War II and the Winds of Change
A. "Arsenal of Democracy": America Prepares for War
B. Pearl Harbor and Japanese American Internment
C. A.P. Randolph, March on Washington Movement/ Executive Order 8802
D. "Americans All": Ethnic minorities on the battlefield and on the home front
E. "Rosie the Riveter": Womaning the Factories
17. Truman's Fair Deal: Expanding the New Deal Legacy
A. Challenging Southern Democrats
B. Desegregation of the Armed Forces
18. Race, Reform and Rebellion: The Civil Rights Revolution
A. Mendez v. Westminster, 1946
B. Brown v. Board of Education, 1954
C. Civil Rights Movement, 1955 - 1965
1. Martin Luther King and non-violence as strategy and philosophy
2. Boycotts, sit-ins, freedom rides, and freedom schools
3. Civil Rights Act of 1964
4. Voting Rights Act of 1965
5. Title VII and women's rights
19. Immigration Reform and Multicultural America
A. Magnuson Bill, 1943
B. McCarran-Walter Act (Nationality Act), 1952
C. Immigration and Nationality Act, 1965
20. Continuing Issues and Controversies
A. The Affirmative Action Debate
B. Third Wave Feminism and Women in Politics
C. Immigration
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A Different Mirror, revised edition. Takaki, Ronald. Back Bay Books: 2008
Equality Deferred: Race, Ethnicity and Immigration in America Since 1945. Olson, James S. Thomson/Wadsworth: 2003
Major Problems in American Immigration and Ethnic History. Gjerda, Jon. Houghton Mifflin: 1998 (Classic)
The Ohlone Way. Margolin, Malcolm. Heyday Books: 1978 (Classic)
Postwar Immigrant America: A Social History. Ueda, Reed. Bedford Books: 1994 (Classic)
Women and the National Experience: Primary Sources in American History, 2nd edition. Skinner, Ellen. Longman: 2003
Women, Race and Class. Davis, Angela Y. Vintage Books: 1983 (Classic)