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Textbook Details
By Steven M. Gillon
- Published
- February 2018
- Discipline
- History Textbooks
- ISBN (Digital)
- 978-1-4533-8757-3
The American Paradox takes a comprehensive, nonpartisan approach to understanding the major events and social movements in American history since 1945. Throughout the text, Gillon focuses on the central contradiction of postwar politics and society: Americans expect their government to solve major social problems, but they retain a fear of federal power. Gillon uses politics and culture to serve as the building blocks for the narrative as he helps students continue to find connections between the past and present, so that they can better understand how the story of post-45 U.S. history is a tale of both unity and division—a uniquely American paradox.
Brief Table of Contents
- Chapter 1: The Specter of Appeasement: The Cold War, 1945–1949
- Chapter 2: In the Shadow of FDR
- Chapter 3: The Cold War Heats Up
- Chapter 4: Boomer Nation
- Chapter 5: The Politics of Moderation, 1951–1960
- Chapter 6: American Ideals and Social Realities, 1952–1960
- Chapter 7: The Kennedy Presidency, 1961–1963
- Chapter 8: Lyndon Johnson, the Great Society, and the Unraveling of America, 1963–1967
- Chapter 9: “Into the Big Muddy”: America in Vietnam, 1945–1968
- Chapter 10: Richard Nixon and the New Republican Majority, 1969–1974
- Chapter 11: The Clash of Cultures, 1969–1980
- Chapter 12: The Age of Limits, 1974–1980
- Chapter 13: The Reagan Presidency, 1981–1989
- Chapter 14: Culture and Consumerism: 1980–1992
- Chapter 15: The End of the Cold War, 1988–1992
- Chapter 16: The Clinton Presidency, 1993–2001
- Chapter 17: The Prosperous Nineties
- Chapter 18: The Challenges of the New Century, 2001 to the Present