(NOTE:
Each chapter begins with chapter-opening outlines and key topic lists and concludes with a Chronology, Conclusion, Review Questions, Recommended Reading, Additional Bibliography, and History on the Internet.)
17. Reconstruction, 1863-1877. American Communities: Hale County, Alabama: From Slavery to Freedom in a Black Belt Community. The Politics of Reconstruction. The Meaning of Freedom. Southern Politics and Society. Reconstructing the North.
18. Conquest and Survival: The Trans-Mississippi West, 1860-1900. American Communities: The Oklahoma Land Rush. Indian Peoples Under Siege. The Internal Empire. The Cattle Industry. Farming Communities on the Plains. The World's Breadbasket. The Western Landscape. The Transformation of Indian Societies.
19. The Incorporation of America, 1865-1900. American Communities: Packingtown, Chicago, Illinois. Rise of Industry, the Triumph of Business. Labor in the Age of Big Business. The New South. The Industrial City. Culture and Society in the Gilded Age. Cultures in Conflict, Culture in Common.
Community and Memory: Representing Chicago's History.
20. Commonwealth and Empire, 1870-1900.
American Communities: The Cooperative Commonwealth. Toward a National Governing Class. Farmers and Workers Organize Their Communities. The Crisis of the 1890s. Politics of Reform, Politics of Order. Imperialism of Righteousness. The Spanish-America War.
21. Urban America and the Progressive Era, 1900-1917.
American Communities: The Henry Street Settlement House: Women Settlement House Workers Create a Community of Reform. The Currents of Progressivism. Social Control and Its Limits. Working-Class Communities and Protest. Women's Movements and Black Awakening. National Progressivism.
Community and Memory: Battle for the Lower East Side.
22. World War I, 1914-1920.
American Communities: Vigilante Justice in Bisbee, Arizona. Becoming a World Power. The Great War. American Mobilization. Over Here. Repression and Reaction. An Uneasy Peace.
23. The Twenties, 1920-1929.
American Communities: The Movie Audience and Hollywood: Mass Culture Creates a New National Community. Postwar Prosperity and Its Price. The New Mass Culture. The State, the Economy, and Business. Resistance to Modernity. Promises Postponed.
24. The Great Depression and the New Deal, 1929-1940.
American Communities: Sit-Down Strike at Flint: Automobile Workers Organize a New Union. Hard Times. FDR and The First New Deal. Left Turn and the Second New Deal. The New Deal and the West. Depression-Era Culture. The Limits of Reform.
25. World War II, 1941-1945.
American Communities: Los Alamos, New Mexico. The Coming of World War II. Arsenal of Democracy. The Home Front. Men and Women in Uniform. The World at War. The Last Stages of War.
26. The Cold War, 1945-1952.
American Communities: University of Washington, Seattle: Students and Faculty Face the Cold War. Global Insecurities at War's End. The Policy of Containment. The Truman Presidency. The Cold War at Home. Cold War Culture. End of the Democratic Era.
27. America at Midcentury, 1952-1963.
American Communities: Popular Music in Memphis. American Society at Midcentury. Youth Culture. Mass Culture and Its Discontents. The Cold War Continued. John F. Kennedy and the New Frontier.
28. The Civil Rights Movement, 1945-1966.
American Communities: The Montgomery Bus Boycott: An African American Community Challenges Segregation. Origins of the Movement. No Easy Road to Freedom, 1957-62. The Movement at High Tide, 1963-65. Forgotten Minorities, 1945-65.
Community and Memory: Flying the Stars and Bars.
29. War at Home, War Abroad, 1965-1974.
American Communities: Uptown. Chicago, Illinois. Vietnam: America's Longest War. A Generation in Conflict. Wars on Poverty. 1968. The Politics of Identity. The Nixon Presidency. Watergate.
30. The Conservative Ascendancy, 1974-1987.
American Communities: Grass Roots Conservatism in Orange County, California. The Overextended Society. Communities and Politics. The New Conservatism. Adjusting to a New World. Reagan Revolution. Best of Times, Worst of Times. Reagan's Foreign Policy.
31. Toward a Transnational America, since 1988.
American Communities: The World Trade Center, New York, as a Transnational Community. A New World Order. The New Economy. Changing American Communities. A New Age of Anxiety. The New Millennium.
Community and Memory: The World Trade Center and Ways of Remembering.
Appendix.Credits.Index.