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Readings
Week 2: Richard Hofstadter, The Progressive Movement, p. 1-4, 14-48.Week 3: War and Society, 1917-1918, in The Way We Lived: Essays and Documents (1996) p. 121-141.Victor J. DiSanto, Henry Johnson's Paradox: A Soldiers Story in Afro-Americans in New York Life and History, 21, 2, July 1997. p.7-17. Week 4: R. Thomas Dye, Rosewood, Florida: The Destruction of An African American Community in Historian, 58, 3, Spring 1996, 605-622. Morals and Manners in the 1920s in The Way We Lived: Essays and Documents (1996), p.166-182 Week 5: Studs Terkel, Hard Times: An Oral History of the Great Depression in My American Century (1997), p.91-130, 137-146 Week 6: The Burdens of Power: The Decision to Drop the Atomic Bomb, 1945, in Discovering the American Past, 3rd Edition, p.199-230. Howard Zinn, A People's War? in A People's History of the United States ( 1980), p. 398-416. Week 7: Ann Charters (Editor.), The Penguin Book of the Beats (1992) p.xv-24, 60-70. Week 8: Martin Luther King, Letter From a Birmingham Jail, in Why We Can't Wait (1964), p. 76-95 and The Black Panther Platform in Alexander Bloom & Wini Breines (Editors.), Takin' it to the Streets: A Sixties Reader (1995), p.164-167. Week 9: Warren Hinckle, A Social History of the Hippies in Gerald Howard (Editor) The Sixties (1991), p. 207-232. The Road to My Lai, in My Lai: A Brief History with Documents (1998), p. 1-25. The Legacy of the Sixties in Reassessing the Sixties (1997), p. 21-45.
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