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CSPAN3 Cold War Modernists October 31, 2015

In 1995. It is a thrill to return here. In many ways, my book actually got its start in this building. I dont way dont mean in the usual grad student labor this is where he started doing research. Iname to New York University 1993 as a naive guy. I have barely been out of oregon. I didnt know anything about new york city. I had resolved to pay my own way in the city without any family help. I got a workstudy job in the reserve room in the basement. I quickly learned that a 10 hour does wasntjob what going to pay Living Expenses in new york city. Even at a cheaper time, it wasnt cheap. I had to quit my workstudy job and got a full time job in publishing at harpercollins. I took classes at night. Hereofit professors were fantastic. When i was learning by working in publishing was even more listening interesting. When i transferred to the university of texas to do my docto ....

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CSPAN3 Lectures In History February 1, 2015

Violent labor strikes were actually an attempt by workers to bring democracy into the workplace by overturning topdown management. He also describes how radical movements in art and literature clashed with the dominant cultural norms of the time. This class is just under an hour. I want to look at the debate in the early 20th century over what is called modernism. How these things work into some of the anxieties we have been talking about really all semester about the rise of modern america and spilling over into the postwar years. Lets look at some quotes from people we have heard from before in the semester to reestablish what the if those was. Walter lippman 1914. He says we can no longer treat life as something that will trickle down to us. We have to deal with it deliberately, devise its social organization formulate its methods, educate and control it. A classic progressive era approach. Chain atoms. Our friend jane adams. She writes, life in the suburbs above all it has been cal ....

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CSPAN3 Lectures In History February 8, 2015

On the development of National Parks, he points out that the parks were established in the 19th century, but there was no one to protect them, or preserve them. He trespasses to keep hunters off them. So the army, really because of the efforts of phil, the commanding general at the time the army steps in and literally saves the National Parks until another organization can be created. For better or worse, the army in the west did much more than just fight indians. The people have historically had a fear of the regular army. From our english traditions, really, and revolutionary war traditions. We fear a Standing Army. Again, it is hard for modern observers to kind of real life because now the military is one of the most trusted institutions in united date. But that wasnt the case in the 19th century. Watch all of our even ....

New York , United States , North Carolina , District Of Columbia , Carl Marx Karl , Harding Warren , William Carlos Williams , Woodrow Wilson , Mitchell Palmer , Albert Einstein , James Whistler , Warren Harding , Jane Adams , Charles Darwin , Lyman Stewart , Edgar Hoover , Klux Klan , Henri Matisse , Jennifer Keenan , Mordecai Hamm , Walter Lippman , William Jennings Bryan , Kenyon Cox , Sigmund Freud , Scott Fitzgerald , Charles Holden ,

CSPAN3 Lectures In History February 1, 2015

This class is just under an hour. I want to look at the debate in the early 20th century over what is called modernism. And how these debates are going to work into some of the anxieties we have been talking about really all semester about the rise of modern america and spilling over into the postwar years. To start with, lets look at some quotes from people we have heard from before in the semester to reestablish what the progressive itosethos was. Walter lippman, 1914. He says we can no longer treat life as something that will trickle down to us. We have to deal with it deliberately, devise its social organization, formulate its methods, educate and control it. A classic progressive era approach. Jane adams. Our friend jane adams. She writes, life in the settlement discovers above all it has been called the extraordinary pliability of human nature. A phrase she probably got from john stuart mill. And it seems impossible to set any bounds to any ideal deal to the moral capability that ....

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CSPAN3 American History TV March 22, 2015

He turned it into his editor who simply refuse to print it. He said i own the paper. He said why . If i print this editorial there will not be a brick left in this building tomorrow. I was wondering, there is a lot of controversy over reconstruction and amnesty in the congress. Did you look at beyond Andrew Johnson, the more deeply into the way the members of congress, and how that their reaction . Martha i have a chapter in the book called glee. The confederates and the copperheads. I have a few pages at the end where i write about the responses of the radical republicans in congress. I only have a few pieces of evidence. In these diary entries, the radical republicans expressed a certain relief that lincoln had been assassinated. They worry they were going to treat the confederacy with too much leniency. It is at the end of the chapter print one of the members of congress wrote down in his diary he was disgusted by how his comra ....

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