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Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self
Find Your Rep

America's History: for the AP® Course

Preparing for the AP® U. S. History ExamNinth Edition| ©2018 James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America’s History for the AP® Course offers a thematic approach paired with skills-oriented pedagogy to help students succeed in the redesigned AP® U.S. History course. Known for its attention to AP® themes and content, the new edition features a nine part structure that closely aligns with...
America’s History for the AP® Course offers a thematic approach paired with skills-oriented pedagogy to help students succeed in the redesigned AP® U.S. History course. Known for its attention to AP® themes and content, the new edition features a nine part structure that closely aligns with the chronology of the AP® U.S. History course, with every chapter and part ending with AP®-style practice questions. With a wealth of supporting resources, America’s History for the AP® Course gives teachers and students the tools they need to master the course and achieve success on the AP® exam.
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Hardcover + Sources for America's History, Volume 1: To 1877 + Sources for America's History, Volume 2: Since 1865 $164.36

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Hardcover + Strive for a 5 for America's History $190.98

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Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

Current interpretations for the new AP® course.

America’s History for the AP® Course offers a thematic approach paired with skills-oriented pedagogy to help students succeed in the redesigned AP® U.S. History course. Known for its attention to AP® themes and content, the new edition features a nine part structure that closely aligns with the chronology of the AP® U.S. History course, with every chapter and part ending with AP®-style practice questions. With a wealth of supporting resources, America’s History for the AP® Course gives teachers and students the tools they need to master the course and achieve success on the AP® exam.

Features

  • The big picture, analytical focus of America’s History helps students understand not just what happened, but why. With its hallmark interpretive voice and thoughtful analysis, Americas History helps students make sense of the contextual and casual relationships between events. A variety of learning tools from the beginning to the end of each chapter support this "Big Idea" focus, which is in line with the new AP® exam’s emphasis on learning objectives.
  • A comprehensive document program offers students practice in document analysis. Four types of source features offer many opportunities for working with historical evidence and prepare students for the rigor of the
    DBQ: "AP® Interpreting the Past," "AP® Analyzing Voices," "AP® America in the World," and "Thinking Like a Historian."
  • Nine-part framework of the textbook highlights key developments throughout history.
  • AP® Concept Connections appear in every Part Opener and connect striking images to the important AP® history concepts that students will explore in each part.
  • AP® Thematic Understanding timelines orient students to major developments and AP® themes of the period.
  • AP® Analyzing Voices, a two-page feature in each chapter, helps students learn to think critically and develop key AP® comparison skills by juxtaposing primary source texts written or spoken from two or more perspectives.
  • AP® America in the World feature uses primary sources and data to situate U.S. history in a global context giving students practice in comparison and data analysis key to success on the AP® exam.
  • An AP® Thinking like a Historian feature in every chapter includes five to eight brief primary sources organized around a central theme that helps students learn to work with evidence and build the critical habits of mind key to success on the DBQ on the AP® exam.

New to This Edition

  • New AP® Practice Questions follow every chapter, including multiple-choice and short answer after every chapter, and long essays and document based questions after every part, to build deep familiarity with the tasks and format of AP® exam items.
  • New AP® Learning Focus questions guide student reading and focus their attention on key historical themes in the chapter by focusing students on not just what happened, but why.
  • AP® Exam Tips highlight important concepts and questions that students should focus on to prepare for the AP® exam.
  • AP® Practices & Skills margin notes identify key historical disciplinary practices and reasoning skills that students will need to hone to perform well on the AP® exam.
  • AP® Interpreting the Past feature brings historical argumentation directly into each chapter, helping students understand how to work with secondary sources.
  • Full-length AP® Practice Exam created by experienced AP® teachers sits at the back of the book, giving students a chance to practice a full exam before the big day.
  • Glossary/Glosario of Historical and Academic Terms gives students a handy guide to important historical content, such as events, movements, court cases, and more; while also providing helpful definitions for terms useful in thinking about history—terms that help describe causes, define trends, or identify contexts. The side-by-side glosario is available for students who would benefit from Spanish-language support for their reading.

"America’s History offers teachers well-organized units, a document set that is full of variety, and thematic introductions that provide the "big picture." Its thematic approach helps students see change and continuity over time."
—Caren Saunders, Kent County High School, MD

"America’s History is a college level textbook that does a really thorough job of covering U.S. history as it will be addressed on the new AP exam. This is an excellent textbook for students with real AP level skills.”
—Louisa Bond Moffitt, Marist School, GA

“America’s History is a well-conceived text that follows the deep cause-and-effect logic of events and is a great source for teaching historical thinking.”
—Timothy R. Mahoney, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America's History: for the AP® Course

Ninth Edition| ©2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

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Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America's History: for the AP® Course

Ninth Edition| 2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

Table of Contents

PART 1 Transformations of North America, 1491–1700

CHAPTER 1

Colliding Worlds, 1491–1600

The Native American Experience

The First Americans

American Empires

Chiefdoms and Confederacies

Patterns of Trade

Sacred Power

Western Europe: The Edge of the Old World

Hierarchy and Authority

Peasant Society

Expanding Trade Networks

Myths, Religions, and Holy Warriors

West and Central Africa: Origins of the Atlantic Slave

Trade

Empires, Kingdoms, and Ministates

Trans-Saharan and Coastal Trade

The Spirit World

Exploration and Conquest

Portuguese Expansion

The African Slave Trade

Sixteenth-Century Incursions

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Altered Landscapes

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Connected Were Native American Communities

Before 1492?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Colliding Cultures

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

A Spanish Priest Criticizes His Fellow Colonists

CHAPTER 1 REVIEW

CHAPTER 1 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 2

American Experiments, 1521–1700

Spain’s Tribute Colonies

A New American World

The Columbian Exchange

The Protestant Challenge to Spain

Plantation Colonies

Brazil’s Sugar Plantations

England’s Tobacco Colonies

The Caribbean Islands

Plantation Life

Neo-European Colonies

New France

New Netherland

The Rise of the Iroquois

New England

Instability, War, and Rebellion

Native American Resistance

Bacon’s Rebellion

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Who Was Pocahontas?

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

What Role Did Climate Play in American

Colonization?

AP® AMERICA IN GLOBAL CONTEXT

Plantation Colonies Versus Neo-Europes

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Susanna Martin, Accused Witch

CHAPTER 2 REVIEW

CHAPTER 2 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 1 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 2 British North America and the Atlantic World, 1607–1763

CHAPTER 3

The British Atlantic World,

1607–1750

Colonies to Empire, 1607–1713

Self-Governing Colonies and New Elites,

1607–1660

The Restoration Colonies and Imperial Expansion

From Mercantilism to Imperial Dominion

The Glorious Revolution in England and America

Imperial Wars and Native Peoples

Tribalization

Indian Goals

The Imperial Slave Economy

The South Atlantic System

Africa, Africans, and the Slave Trade

Slavery in the Chesapeake and South Carolina

An African American Community Emerges

The Rise of the Southern Gentry

The Northern Maritime Economy

The Urban Economy

Urban Society

The New Politics of Empire, 1713–1750

The Rise of Colonial Assemblies

Salutary Neglect

Protecting the Mercantile System

Mercantilism and the American Colonies

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Native Americans and European Empires

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

O laudah Equiano: The Brutal "Middle Passage" A

P® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Why Did Americans Adopt Slavery?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Servitude and Slavery

CHAPTER 3 REVIEW

CHAPTER 3 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 4

Growth, Diversity, and Conflict,

1720–1763

New England’s Freehold Society

Farm Families: Women in the Household

Economy

Farm Property: Inheritance

Freehold Society in Crisis

Diversity in the Middle Colonies

Economic Growth, Opportunity, and Conflict

Cultural Diversity

Religion and Politics

Commerce, Culture, and Identity

Transportation and the Print Revolution

The Enlightenment in America

American Pietism and the Great Awakening

Religious Upheaval in the North

Social and Religious Conflict in the South

The Midcentury Challenge: War, Trade, and Social

Conflict, 1750–1763

The French and Indian War

The Great War for Empire

British Industrial Growth and the Consumer

Revolution

The Struggle for Land in the East

Western Rebels and Regulators

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Women’s Labor

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Transatlantic Migration, 1500–1760

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Did Diversity Lead to Toleration?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Evangelical Religion and Enlightenment

Rationalism

CHAPTER 4 REVIEW

CHAPTER 4 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 2 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS


PART 3 Revolution and Republican Culture, 1754–1800

CHAPTER 5

The Problem of Empire,

1754–1776

An Empire Transformed

The Costs of Empire

George Grenville and the Reform Impulse

An Open Challenge: The Stamp Act

The Dynamics of Rebellion, 1765–1770

Formal Protests and the Politics of the Crowd

The Ideological Roots of Resistance

Another Kind of Freedom

Parliament and Patriots Square Off Again

The Problem of the West

Parliament Wavers

The Road to Independence, 1771–1776

A Compromise Repudiated

The Continental Congress Responds

The Rising of the Countryside

Loyalists and Neutrals

Violence East and West

Lord Dunmore’s War

Armed Resistance in Massachusetts

The Second Continental Congress Organizes

for War

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense

Independence Declared

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Britain’s Atlantic and Asian Empires

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Beyond the Proclamation Line

AP® INTERPRETATIONS

Did British Administrators Try to Protect or Exploit

Native Americans?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Debate over Representation and

Sovereignty

CHAPTER 5 REVIEW

CHAPTER 5 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 6

Making War and Republican

Governments, 1776–1789

The Trials of War, 1776–1778

War in the North

Armies and Strategies

Victory at Saratoga

The Perils of War

Financial Crisis

Valley Forge

The Path to Victory, 1778–1783

The French Alliance

War in the South

The Patriot Advantage

Diplomatic Triumph

Creating Republican Institutions, 1776–1787

The State Constitutions: How Much Democracy?

Women Seek a Public Voice

The War’s Losers: Loyalists, Native Americans,

and Slaves

The Articles of Confederation

Shays’s Rebellion

The Constitution of 1787

The Rise of a Nationalist Faction

The Philadelphia Convention

The People Debate Ratification

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Black Soldier’s Dilemma

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

China’s Growing Empire

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was the Constitution Necessary?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The First National Debate over Slavery

CHAPTER 6 REVIEW

CHAPTER 6 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 7

Hammering Out a Federal Republic,

1787–1820

The Political Crisis of the 1790s

The Federalists Implement the Constitution

Hamilton’s Financial Program

Jefferson’s Agrarian Vision

The French Revolution Divides Americans

The Rise of Political Parties

A Republican Empire Is Born

Sham Treaties and Indian Lands

Migration and the Changing Farm Economy

The Jefferson Presidency

Jefferson and the West

The War of 1812 and the Transformation of

Politics

Conflict in the Atlantic and the West

The War of 1812

The Federalist Legacy

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Did Hamilton’s Economic System Endanger the

Legacy of the Revolution?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Social Life of Alcohol

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Haitian Revolution and the Problem of Race

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Factional Politics and the War of 1812

CHAPTER 7 REVIEW

CHAPTER 7 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 3 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 4 Overlapping Revolutions, 1800–1848

CHAPTER 8

Economic Transformations,

1800–1848

Foundations of a New Economic Order

Credit and Banking

Transportation and the Market Revolution

The Cotton Complex: Northern Industry and Southern

Agriculture

The American Industrial Revolution

Origins of the Cotton South

The Cotton Boom and Slavery

Technological Innovation and Labor

The Spread of Innovation

Wageworkers and the Labor Movement

The Growth of Cities and Towns

New Social Classes and Cultures

Planters, Yeomen, and Slaves

The Northern Business Elite

The Middle Class

Urban Workers and the Poor

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Entrepreneur and the Community

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Fate of the American and Indian Textile

Industries

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Debate over Free and Slave Labor

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Did the Market Revolution Expand Opportunities for

Women?

CHAPTER 8 REVIEW

CHAPTER 8 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 9

A Democratic Revolution,

1800–1848

The Rise of Popular Politics

The Decline of the Notables and the Rise

of Parties

Racial Exclusion and Republican Motherhood

The Missouri Crisis, 1819–1821

The Election of 1824

The Last Notable President: John Quincy Adams

"The Democracy" and the Election of 1828

Jackson in Power, 1829–1837

Jackson’s Agenda: Rotation and Decentralization

The Tariff and Nullification

The Bank War

Indian Removal

Jackson’s Impact

Class, Culture, and the Second Party System

The Whig Worldview

Labor Politics and the Depression of 1837–1843

"Tippecanoe and Tyler Too!"

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Alexis de Tocqueville: Letter to Louis de Kergorlay,

June 29, 1831

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Character and Goals of Andrew Jackson

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was Indian Removal Humanitarian or Racist?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Becoming Literate: Public Education

and Democracy

CHAPTER 9 REVIEW

CHAPTER 9 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 10

Religion, Reform, and Culture,

1820–1848

Spiritual Awakenings

The Second Great Awakening

Ralph Waldo Emerson and Transcendentalism

Utopian Experiments

Urban Cultures and Conflicts

Sex in the City

Popular Fiction and the Penny Press

Urban Entertainments

African Americans and the Struggle for Freedom

Free Black Communities, North and South

The Rise of Abolitionism

The Women’s Rights Movement

Origins of the Women’s Rights Movement

From Antislavery to Women’s Rights

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

What Motivated Antebellum Reformers?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Saving the Nation from Drink

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Dance and Social Identity in Antebellum

America

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Women’s Rights in France and the

United States, 1848

CHAPTER 10 REVIEW

CHAPTER 10 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 11

Imperial Ambitions, 1820–1848

The Expanding South

Planters, Small Freeholders, and Poor Freemen

The Settlement of Texas

The Politics of Democracy

The African American World

Evangelical Black Protestantism

Forging Families and Communities

Negotiating Rights

Manifest Destiny, North and South

The Push to the Pacific

The Plains Indians

The Fateful Election of 1844

The U.S.-Mexico War, 1846–1848

The "War of a Thousand Deserts"

Polk’s Expansionist Program

American Military Successes

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Childhood in Black and White

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

What Explains American Enthusiasm for

Manifest Destiny?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The U.S.-Mexico War: Expansion and Slavery

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Financing War

CHAPTER 11 REVIEW

CHAPTER 11 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 4 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 5 Consolidating a Continental Union, 1844–1877

CHAPTER 12

Sectional Conflict and Crisis,

1844–1861

A Divisive War, 1844–1850

"Free Soil" in Politics

California Gold and Racial Warfare

1850: Crisis and Compromise

The End of the Second Party System, 1850–1858

The Abolitionist Movement Grows

The Whig Party’s Demise

Immigrants and Know-Nothings

The West and the Fate of the Union

Abraham Lincoln and the Republican Triumph,

1858–1860

Lincoln’s Political Career

The Union Under Siege

The Election of 1860

Secession Winter, 1860–1861

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Did Slavery Have a Future in the West?

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Gold Rush: California and Australia

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Irish in America

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

To Secede or Not to Secede?

CHAPTER 12 REVIEW

CHAPTER 12 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 13

Bloody Ground: The Civil War,

1861–1865

War Begins, 1861–1862

Early Expectations

Campaigns East and West

Antietam and Its Consequences

Toward "Hard War," 1863

Politics North and South

The Impact of Emancipation

Citizens and the Work of War

Vicksburg and Gettysburg

The Road to Union Victory, 1864–1865

Grant and Sherman Take Command

The Election of 1864 and Sherman’s March

The Confederacy Collapses

The World the War Made

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Divided Was the Confederate Public?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Military Deaths — and Lives Saved — During the

Civil War

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

These Honored Dead

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

War Debt: Britain and the United States,

1830–1900

CHAPTER 13 REVIEW

CHAPTER 13 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 14

Reconstruction, 1865–1877

The Struggle for National Reconstruction

Presidential Approaches: From Lincoln to

Johnson

Congress Versus the President

Radical Reconstruction

Women’s Rights Denied

The Meaning of Freedom

The Quest for Land

Republican Governments in the South

Building Black Communities

The Undoing of Reconstruction

The Republicans Unravel

Counterrevolution in the South

Reconstruction Rolled Back

The Political Crisis of 1877

Lasting Legacies

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Labor Laws After Emancipation: Haiti and the United States

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Free Were Freedwomen in Reconstruction?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Impact of Terror

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The South’s "Lost Cause"

CHAPTER 14 REVIEW

CHAPTER 14 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 15

Conquering a Continent,

1860–1890

The Republican Vision

The New Union and the World

Integrating the National Economy

Incorporating the West

Mining Empires

Cattlemen on the Plains

Homesteaders

The First National Park

A Harvest of Blood: Native Peoples Dispossessed

The Civil War and Indians on the Plains

Grant’s Peace Policy

The End of Armed Resistance

Strategies of Survival

Western Myths and Realities

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Santa Fe Railroad in Mexico and the

United States

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Women’s Rights in the West

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

What Factors Motivated America’s Indian

Policies?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Representing Indians

CHAPTER 15 REVIEW

CHAPTER 15 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 5 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS


PART 6 Industrializing America: Upheavals and Experiments, 1877–1917

Experiments,

CHAPTER 16

Industrial America: Corporations

and Conflicts, 1877–1911

The Rise of Big Business

Innovators in Enterprise

The Corporate Workplace

On the Shop Floor

Immigrants, East and West

Newcomers from Europe

Asian Americans and Exclusion

Labor Gets Organized

The Emergence of a Labor Movement

The Knights of Labor

Farmers and Workers: The Cooperative Alliance

Another Path: The American Federation of Labor

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Modern Were Late-Nineteenth-Century

Corporations?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Poverty and Food

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Emigrants and Destinations, 1881–1915

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Jewish Immigrants in the Industrial Economy

CHAPTER 16 REVIEW

CHAPTER 16 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 17

Making Modern American Culture,

1880–1917

Science and Faith

Darwinism and Its Critics

Religion: Diversity and Innovation

Realism in the Arts

Commerce and Culture

Consumer Spaces

Masculinity and the Rise of Sports

The Great Outdoors

Women, Men, and the Solitude of Self

Changing Families

Education

Toward Women’s Emancipation

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

William Graham Sumner and W. E. B. Du Bois on

Heredity and Success

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Christianity in the United States and Japan

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was Professional Baseball a Pastime or a Business

Monopoly — or Both?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

WCTU Women "Do Everything"

CHAPTER 17 REVIEW

CHAPTER 17 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 18

"Civilization’s Inferno": The Rise and

Reform of Industrial Cities,

1880–1917

The New Metropolis

The Shape of the Industrial City

Newcomers and Neighborhoods

City Cultures

Governing the Great City

Urban Machines

The Limits of Machine Government

Crucibles of Progressive Reform

Fighting Dirt and Vice

The Movement for Social Settlements

Cities and National Politics

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The World’s Biggest Cities, 1800–2000

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Making Mass Media: Newspaper Empires

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Did Urban Progressive Reformers Approach

Environmentalism?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

"These Dead Bodies Were the Answer":

The Triangle Fire

CHAPTER 18 REVIEW

CHAPTER 18 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 19

Whose Government? Politics,

Populists, and Progressives,

1880–1917

Reform Visions, 1880–1892

Electoral Politics After Reconstruction

The Populist Program

The Political Earthquakes of the 1890s

Depression and Reaction

Democrats and the "Solid South"

New National Realities

Reform Reshaped, 1901–1912

Theodore Roosevelt as President

Diverse Progressive Goals

The Election of 1912

Wilson and the New Freedom, 1913–1917

Economic Reforms

Progressive Legacies

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Making Modern Presidents

AP® INTERPRETATIONS

Were the "Gilded Age" and "Progressive Era"

Separate Periods?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Omaha Platform, 1892

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Economic Output and Government Social

Spending, 1913

CHAPTER 19 REVIEW

CHAPTER 19 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 6 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 7 Domestic and Global Challenges, 1890–1945

CHAPTER 20

An Emerging World Power,

1890–1918

From Expansion to Imperialism

Foundations of Empire

The War of 1898

Spoils of War

A Power Among Powers

The Open Door in Asia

The United States and Latin America

The United States in World War I

From Neutrality to War

"Over There"

War on the Home Front

Catastrophe at Versailles

The Fate of Wilson’s Ideas

Congress Rejects the Treaty

ANALYZING VOICES

Debating the Philippines

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Human Cost of World War I

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

German Americans in World War I

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was Wilson’s Internationalism Successful?

CHAPTER 20 REVIEW

CHAPTER 20 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 21

Unsettled Prosperity: From War

to Depression, 1919–1932

Resurgent Conservatism

The Red Scare

Racial Backlash

The Business of America

Politics of Normalcy

Making a Modern Consumer Economy

Postwar Abundance

Consumer Culture

The Automobile and Suburbanization

The Politics and Culture of a Diversifying Nation

Women in a New Age

Culture Wars

The Harlem Renaissance

The Coming of the Great Depression

From Boom to Bust

Early Depression Years

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Hollywood in Europe

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

H ow Did Immigrants Experience America at the

Turn of the Century?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Urban Writers Describe Small-Town America

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Who Joined the Ku Klux Klan?

CHAPTER 21 REVIEW

CHAPTER 21 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 22

Managing the Great Depression,

Forging the New Deal, 1929–1938

Early Responses to the Depression, 1929–1932

Enter Herbert Hoover

Rising Discontent

The 1932 Election

The New Deal Arrives, 1933–1935

Roosevelt and the First Hundred Days

The New Deal Under Attack

The Second New Deal and the Redefining of

Liberalism, 1935–1938

The Welfare State Comes into Being

From Reform to Stalemate

The New Deal and American Society

A People’s Democracy

Reshaping the Environment

The New Deal and the Arts

The Legacies of the New Deal

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Ordinary People Respond to the New Deal

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was the New Deal a Reform or a Revolution?

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Economic Nationalism in the United States

and Mexico

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The New Deal and Public Works

CHAPTER 22 REVIEW

CHAPTER 22 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS


CHAPTER 23

The World at War, 1937–1945

The Road to War

The Rise of Fascism

War Approaches

The Attack on Pearl Harbor

Organizing for a Global War

Financing the War

Mobilizing the American Fighting Force

Workers and the War Effort

Politics in Wartime

Life on the Home Front

"For the Duration"

Migration and the Wartime City

Japanese Removal

Fighting and Winning the War

Wartime Aims and Tensions

The War in Europe

The War in the Pacific

The Atomic Bomb and the End of the War

The Toll of the War

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Scales of War: Losses and Gains During

World War II

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Women in the Wartime Workplace

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Mobilizing the Home Front

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Why Did the United States Drop the Atomic Bomb

on Japan?

CHAPTER 23 REVIEW

CHAPTER 23 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 7 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 8 The Modern State and the Age of Liberalism, 1945–1980

CHAPTER 24

Cold War America,

1945–1963

Containment in a Divided Global Order

Origins of the Cold War

The Containment Strategy

Containment in Asia

Cold War Liberalism

Truman and the End of Reform

Red Scare: The Hunt for Communists

The Politics of Cold War Liberalism

Containment in the Postcolonial World

The Cold War and Colonial Independence

John F. Kennedy and the Cold War

Making a Commitment in Vietnam

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Why Was There a Cold War?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Global Cold War

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Arming for the Cold War

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Hunting Communists: The Case of Paul Robeson

CHAPTER 24 REVIEW

CHAPTER 24 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 25

Triumph of the Middle Class,

1945–1963

Postwar Prosperity and the Affluent Society

Economy: From Recovery to Dominance

A Nation of Consumers

Youth Culture

Religion and the Middle Class

The American Family in the Era of Containment

The Baby Boom

Women, Work, and Family

Challenging Middle-Class Morality

A Suburban Nation

The Postwar Housing Boom

Rise of the Sunbelt

Two Societies: Urban and Suburban

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was Rock ’n’ Roll an Agent of Social Change?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Coming of Age in the Postwar Years

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Suburban Landscape of Cold War America

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Hanoch Bartov: Everyone Has a Car

CHAPTER 25 REVIEW

CHAPTER 25 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 26

Walking into Freedom Land: The Civil

Rights Movement, 1941–1973

The Emerging Civil Rights Struggle, 1941–1957

Life Under Jim Crow

Origins of the Civil Rights Movement

World War II: The Beginnings

Cold War Civil Rights

Mexican Americans and Japanese Americans

Fighting for Equality Before the Law

Forging a Protest Movement, 1955–1965

Nonviolent Direct Action

Legislating Civil Rights, 1963–1965

Beyond Civil Rights, 1966–1973

Black Nationalism

Urban Disorder

Rise of the Chicano Movement

The American Indian Movement

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Freedom in the United States and Africa

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Race and Geography in the Civil Rights Era

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Was Martin Luther King Jr. a Radical or a

Reformer?

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Civil Rights and Black Power: Strategy

and Ideology

CHAPTER 26 REVIEW

CHAPTER 26 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 27

Uncivil Wars: Liberal Crisis and

Conservative Rebirth, 1961–1972

Liberalism at High Tide

John F. Kennedy’s Promise

Lyndon B. Johnson and the Great Society

Rebirth of the Women’s Movement

The Vietnam War Begins

Escalation Under Johnson

Public Opinion and the War

The Student Movement

Days of Rage, 1968–1972

War Abroad, Tragedy at Home

The Antiwar Movement and the 1968 Election

The Nationalist Turn

Women’s Liberation and Black and Chicana

Feminism

Stonewall and Gay Liberation

Rise of the Silent Majority

Nixon in Vietnam

The Silent Majority Speaks Out

The 1972 Election

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

What Are the Origins of 1960s Feminism?

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

The Toll of War

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Debating the War in Vietnam

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

The Global Protests of 1968

CHAPTER 27 REVIEW

CHAPTER 27 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 28

The Search for Order in an Era

of Limits, 1973–1980

An Era of Limits

Energy Crisis

Environmentalism

Economic Transformation

Urban Crisis and Suburban Revolt

Politics in Flux, 1973–1980

Watergate and the Fall of a President

Jimmy Carter: The Outsider as President

Reform and Reaction in the 1970s

Civil Rights in a New Era

The Women’s Movement and Gay Rights

After the Warren Court

The American Family on Trial

Working Families in the Age of

Deindustrialization

Navigating the Sexual Revolution

Religion in the 1970s: The New Evangelicalism

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

The Environmental Movement: Reimagining the

Human-Earth Relationship

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

Why Did the Postwar Boom Bust in the 1970s?

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Economic Malaise in the Seventies

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Debating the Equal Rights Amendment

CHAPTER 28 REVIEW

CHAPTER 28 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 8 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

PART 9 Globalization and the End of the American Century, 1980 to the Present

CHAPTER 29

Conservative America in the Ascent,

1980–1991

The Rise of the New Right

Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan: Champions of

the Right

Free-Market Economics and Religious

Conservatism

The Carter Presidency

The Dawning of the Conservative Age

The Reagan Coalition

Conservatives in Power

Morning in America

The End of the Cold War

U.S.-Soviet Relations in a New Era

A New Political Order at Home and Abroad

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Christianity and Public Life

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Yoichi Funabashi: "Japan and America:

Global Partners"

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Personal Computing: A Technological Revolution

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Conservative Was the Reagan Presidency?

CHAPTER 29 REVIEW

CHAPTER 29 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

CHAPTER 30

Confronting Global and National

Dilemmas, 1989 to the Present

America in the Global Economy

The Rise of the European Union and China

A New Era of Globalization

Revolutions in Technology

Politics and Partisanship in a Contentious Era

An Increasingly Plural Society

Clashes over "Family Values"

Bill Clinton and the New Democrats

Post–Cold War Foreign Policy

Into a New Century

The Ascendance of George W. Bush

Violence Abroad and Economic Collapse at

Home

Reform and Stalemate in the Obama Years

AP® THINKING LIKE A HISTORIAN

Globalization: Its Proponents and Its Discontents

AP® AMERICA IN THE WORLD

Global Trade, 1960–2009

AP® ANALYZING VOICES

Immigration After 1965: Its Defenders and Critics

AP® INTERPRETING THE PAST

How Should Historians Write the History of

Current Events?

CHAPTER 30 REVIEW

CHAPTER 30 AP® PRACTICE QUESTIONS

PART 9 AP® PRACTICE ESSAY QUESTIONS

DOCUMENTS

The Declaration of Independence

The Constitution of the United States of America

Amendments to the Constitution (Including the

Six Unratified Amendments)

Appendix

Glossaries/Glosarios

Index

Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America's History: for the AP® Course

Ninth Edition| 2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

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Authors

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James Henretta

James A. Henretta  is Professor Emeritus of American History at the University of Maryland, College Park, where he taught Early American History and Legal History. His publications include “Salutary Neglect”: Colonial Administration under the Duke of Newcastle; Evolution and Revolution: American Society, 1600–1820; and The Origins of American Capitalism. His most recent publication is a long article, “Magistrates, Lawyers, Legislators: The Three Legal Systems of Early America,” in The Cambridge History of American Law.


Headshot of Eric Hinderaker

Eric Hinderaker

Eric Hinderaker is Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Utah. His research explores early modern imperialism, relations between Europeans and Native Americans, military-civilian relations in the Atlantic world, and comparative colonization. His most recent book, Boston's Massacre, was awarded the Cox Book Prize from the Society of the Cincinnati and was a finalist for the George Washington Prize. His other publications include Elusive Empires: Constructing Colonialism in the Ohio Valley, 1673–1800; The Two Hendricks: Unraveling a Mohawk Mystery, which won the Herbert H. Lehman Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in New York History from the New York Academy of History; and, with Peter C. Mancall, At the Edge of Empire: The Backcountry in British North America.


Headshot of Rebecca Edwards

Rebecca Edwards

Rebecca Edwards is Eloise Ellery Professor of History at Vassar College, where she teaches courses on nineteenth-century politics, the Civil War, the frontier West, and women, gender, and sexuality. She is the author of, among other publications, Angels in the Machinery: Gender in American Party Politics from the Civil War to the Progressive Era; New Spirits: Americans in the “Gilded Age,” 1865–1905; and the essay “Women's and Gender History” in The New American History. She is currently working on a book about the role of childbearing in the expansion of America's nineteenth-century empire.


Headshot of Robert O. Self

Robert O. Self

Robert O. Self is Mary Ann Lippitt Professor of American History at Brown University. His research focuses on urban history, American politics, and the post-1945 United States. He is the author of American Babylon: Race and the Struggle for Postwar Oakland, which won four professional prizes, including the James A. Rawley Prize from the Organization of American Historians, and All in the Family: The Realignment of American Democracy Since the 1960s. He is currently at work on a book about the centrality of houses, cars, and children to family consumption in the twentieth-century United States.

Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America's History: for the AP® Course

Ninth Edition| 2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

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Annotated Teacher's Edition for America's History, For the AP® Course

James A. Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert O. Self | Ninth Edition | ©2018 | ISBN:9781319065775
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James A. Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert O. Self | Ninth Edition | ©2018 | ISBN:9781319065911
The Test Bank includes chapter-based questions and more than six AP®-style practice exams. This tool is available exclusively within the ExamView® Ass...
The Test Bank includes chapter-based questions and more than six AP®-style practice exams. This tool is available exclusively within the ExamView® Assessment Suite software. You may select from the provided questions or use the step-by-step tutorial to write your own. Questions can be sorted according to various metadata fields and scrambled to create different versions of tests. Tests may be printed or administered online using the ExamView® Player.
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James A. Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert O. Self | Ninth Edition | ©2019 | ISBN:9781319065959
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Look Inside Look Inside Cover: America's History: for the AP® Course, 9th Edition by James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

America's History: for the AP® Course

Ninth Edition| 2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

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Ninth Edition| 2018

James Henretta; Eric Hinderaker; Rebecca Edwards; Robert Self

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