Fr. 126.00

Progressives - Activism and Reform in American Society, 1893 - 1917

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

The Progressives offers comprehensive coverage of the origins, evolution, and notable events that came to define the pivotal period of American history known as the Progressive Era.
 
* Offers a rich, in-depth analysis of who the progressives were and the process through which they identified and attacked social, economic, and political injustices
* Features an up-to-date synthesis of the literature of the field including comprehensive treatment of the role of women in the Progressive Movement
* Considers the movement's enduring impact - and how its vision for a better society became transfixed in the American social consciousness and helped to create the modern welfare state
* Part of the well-respected American History series
* Integrates themes of class, race, ethnicity, and gender throughout, offering a concise and engaging account of a fascinating era in U.S. history that forever changed the relationship between a democratic government and its citizens

List of contents

Acknowledgments ix
 
Introduction 1
 
1 Setting the Stage: The Birth of the Progressive Impulse, 1893-1900 13
 
On the Farm 13
 
City Life 18
 
Hard Times: The Depression of 1893 24
 
Businesses: Small to Large 26
 
Small businesses evolve 26
 
Big business 34
 
Mergers and monopolies 37
 
Labor 38
 
The workplace in transition 40
 
The struggle to organize 42
 
Working women 46
 
African American workers 49
 
Immigrant workers 50
 
A New Era Dawns 51
 
2 Saving Society: Who Were the Progressives? 56
 
The Muckrakers 57
 
From Religious Roots to Secular Salvation 64
 
Fundamentalists 65
 
The Social Gospelers 66
Intellectual inspiration 67
 
From Charity Cases to Social Work 68
 
Women Progressives 70
 
Club women 70
 
Settlement workers advocate social justice 73
 
Professionalization in the Progressive Era 80
 
Social workers 81
 
The medical field 83
 
The legal profession 88
 
Engineering 89
 
Academia 89
 
The female professions: teaching, nursing, and librarianship 91
 
Businessmen 93
 
Labor Unions and Radical Movements 96
 
Other Special Interest Groups 98
 
Politicians and early reform 98
 
The "immigrant problem" 99
 
African Americans 100
 
Nativists 101
 
Farmers and Rural Reform 103
 
3 "Constructing the World Anew": Progressive Agency, 1900-1911 106
 
Stepping into a New World: The Industrial City 106
 
Settlement Workers Transform the Neighborhoods 109
 
Women's Political Culture Emerges 114
 
Jane Addams elevates settlement activism 116
 
Workers on the Move 118
 
Health and safety in the workplace 120
 
Florence Kelley and the Push for Protective Legislation 127
 
Child labor 129
 
Educational Reform 133
 
Social Centers 135
 
The Chautauqua movement 138
 
Country Life Commission 139
 
Political Pathways to Reform 141
 
Mugwumps, machine politics, and municipal reform 141
 
The Good Government movement 143
 
Beautiful cities and urban planning: from aesthetics to efficiency 145
 
State Level Reform 148
 
LaFollette and the Wisconsin Idea 148
 
Beyond Wisconsin 150
 
Businessmen Left Behind 151
 
The Radical Political Reaction 152
 
Socialists 152
 
Industrial Workers of the World 153
 
Labor Leans Political 155
 
Labor's Bill of Grievances 156
 
Workplace activism 160
 
Progressivism Takes Center Stage 161
 
4 The Shape of Things to Come: Progressivism and the Transition to Modern Life, 1912-1917 165
 
The Rise of Consumerism 165
 
Impact of the automobile 168
 
Corporate America Takes Control 170
 
Scientific management 171
 
Welfare capitalism 173
 
The Triangle Waist Factory Fire 174
 
The legacy of Triangle 176
 
The Election of 1912 178
 
Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party platform 180
 
The incumbent: William Howard Taft 184
 
Eugene Debs and the Socialists 185
 
Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic platform 185
 
Wilson in the White House 186
 
The election of 1916 189
 
Progressivism in the National Consciousness 191
 
Conclusion: The Progressives' Progress 194
 
Bibliographical Essay 211
 
Index 247

About the author










Karen Pastorello is Professor of History and Women and Gender Studies at Tompkins Cortland Community College (SUNY) where she directs the Honors Program. She is the author of A Power Among Them: Bessie Abramowitz Hillman and the Making of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (2008).

Summary

The Progressives offers comprehensive coverage of the origins, evolution, and notable events that came to define the pivotal period of American history known as the Progressive Era. Integrating themes of class, race, ethnicity, and gender throughout, it provides a concise, engaging account of a fascinating era in U.S.

Report

"A strong, solid, scholarly and yet completely readable and accessible book, one with immediate course adoptability."
 
--Richard Greenwald, St. Joseph's College
"In addition to the usual players and locales, Pastorello's account offers descriptions of rural life as well as urban, business as well as labor, New York but also Chicago and Detroit among other centers of change at the time. It is a complexly conceived, well-written and engaging account of the Progressive Era."
 
--Annelise Orleck, Dartmouth College

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.