Liberty, Equality, and Justice: Civil Rights, Women's Rights, and the Regulation of Business, 1865-1932Liberty, equality, and justice have long been treasured in American culture as core values. In Liberty, Equality, and Justice, Ross Evans Paulson studies social and intellectual changes in a critical period of American history—from the end of the Civil War to the early days of the Depression—and argues that attempts to achieve civil rights, women’s rights, and the regulation of business faltered because so many Americans ranked liberty for themselves higher than equality with others and justice for all. Surveying a crucial period in the formation of the modern state and society, Paulson examines the prevailing conflicts of the time and the limitations of various attempts to institute reform, radical change, or ritualistic renewal of American society. His reading of existing scholarship highlights contested social constructs, clashing priorities, changing meanings of key terms, and shifting institutional dynamics in light of their contributions to a complex tragedy in which all parties fell short of the demands for democratic mutuality. Along with discussions of the movements and manipulations of presidential, congressional, and judicial politics, he integrates the experiences of diverse populations—including African Americans, women, Asian immigrants, Native Americans, and working people—and offers a new interpretation of the ways in which social change and political events interact to reframe the many possibilities of American society. |
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Seite 241
Events during World War I and the early 1920s helped to create an intellectual
division between the older concept of civil liberty and the newer concept of civil
liberties . The prewar concept of civil liberty had held that the needs and ...
Events during World War I and the early 1920s helped to create an intellectual
division between the older concept of civil liberty and the newer concept of civil
liberties . The prewar concept of civil liberty had held that the needs and ...
Seite 247
For an example of a historical explanation of American values in the nineteenth
century that utilized the primacy of the concept of equality , see Henry Steele
Commager , The American Mind : An Interpretation of American Thought and ...
For an example of a historical explanation of American values in the nineteenth
century that utilized the primacy of the concept of equality , see Henry Steele
Commager , The American Mind : An Interpretation of American Thought and ...
Seite 282
2 A social language is not the same concept as an ideology . An ideology is an
interlocking set of principles that function both as a description of the world by
creating the semantic categories to describe it and as a prescription for how one
...
2 A social language is not the same concept as an ideology . An ideology is an
interlocking set of principles that function both as a description of the world by
creating the semantic categories to describe it and as a prescription for how one
...
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Inhalt
30619282 | 3 |
Part1 Old Languages and New Realities | 15 |
From Congressional Reconstruction to the Civil Rights Cases of 1883 | 29 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Liberty, Equality, and Justice: Civil Rights, Women's Rights, and the ... Ross Evans Paulson Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1997 |
Liberty, Equality, and Justice: Civil Rights, Women's Rights, and the ... Ross Evans Paulson Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1997 |
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achieve activities advocates African American Amendment American History Association attempts Bois called Cambridge chap Chicago citizens citizenship civil liberty civil rights competition concept Congress constitutional cooperation core values corporate Court created cultural Democratic economic efficiency efforts equality farmers federal freedom groups hand historian History Hoover immigrants independence individual industrial institutions interest issue justice labor leaders League legislation limited means movement nature noted organizations particularly Party period political president production progressive proposed protection Publishing quotation race racial radical railroad Reconstruction reform regulation Republicans response rhetoric rituals Robert role separate situation social social languages socialist society South Southern status Study suffrage Supreme Court tion trade traditional unions United University Press vote wartime Wilson woman women women's rights workers World York
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