America in White, Black, and Gray: The Stormy 1960s

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A&C Black, 2006 M01 1 - 452 páginas
From the reviews of Nazi Germany "The best one-volume history of the Third Reich available.It fills a void which has existed for a long time and it will probably become the basic text for generations of students." Walter Laqueur "An indispensable, compellingly readable political, military and social history of the Third Reich." Publishers Weekly From the reviews of History of an Obsession "This is truly a significant work, for Fischer gives a balanced account of a complex subject, making it painfully clear just how Germany became capable of genocide." Booklist "Fischer writes with a clear mastery of both primary and secondary sources. Synthesizing a wide spectrum of literature into a fine, scholarly work." Library Journal No decade since the end of World War II has been as seminal in its historical significance as the 1960s. That stormy period unleashed a host of pent-up social and generational conflicts that had not been experienced since the Civil War: intense racial and ethnic strife, cold war terror, the Vietnam War, counter-cultural protests, controversial social engineering, and political rancor. Numerous studies on various aspects of these issues have been written over the past 35 years, but few have so successfully integrated the many-sided components into a coherent, synthetic, and reliable book that combines good storytelling with sound scholarly analysis. The main materials covered will be the Kennedy and Johnson presidencies; the Civil Rights movement; the Vietnam War and the protest it generated; the New Left, student radicals, and Black student militancy; and, finally, the counter-cultural side of the 60s: hippies, sex and Rock 'n' Roll.
 

Contenido

Before and After the 1960s
8
An Age of Protest
14
The Myth of a Perfect Beginning
20
1
35
23
42
THE PIG IN THE PYTHON
53
JOHN F KENNEDY AND THE CAMELOT IMAGE
73
The World at the Nuclear Brink
85
The Dump Johnson Movement
222
Thunder from the Right
235
Miami Chicago and the Election of 1968
242
A YOUNG GENERATION IN REVOLT
252
The New Left and Student Militancy in the 1960s
257
The Free Speech Movement at Berkeley
260
From Protest to Revolutionary Action
265
Students at War with the Establishment
269

The Legacy
99
LIBERALISM AT HIGH TIDE UNDER LYNDON JOHNSON
137
The Great Society
145
The Warren Court
159
78
165
From Great Society to Sick Society
167
VIETNAM AND PROTEST
170
85
175
Paying Any Price and Bearing Any Burden
177
LBJ and the War
181
Hell No We Wont Go
187
88
198
Nixons War and Defeat in Vietnam
200
сл
205
The End of Victory Culture?
206
THE CRISIS OF 1968
212
The Crisis of Law and Order
215
Radical Terrorism and the Conservative Reaction
275
Black Student Militancy
281
The Student Right
288
Coda
292
COUNTERCULTURAL PROTEST MOVEMENTS
295
The Myth of the Woodstock Nation
298
The Commune Movement
312
Its the Music Stupid
317
Counterculture into Consumer Culture
331
RIDING THE COATTAILS OF REVOLT Neglected Minorities
336
Radical Feminism
338
PEERING INTO THE HISTORICAL LOOKING GLASS
363
NOTES
388
BIBLIOGRAPHY
420
INDEX
439
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Klaus Fischer is a cultural historian of Modern Europe with expertise in Nazi Germany and the Holocaust. Born in Germany in 1942, he arrived in the United States in 1959 as a 17-year-old emigrant. He attended Arizona State University and then the University of California, Santa Barbara, where he received his PhD in 1972. He is the author of Nazi Germany: A New History and The History of an Obsession: German Judeophobia and the Holocaust.

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