|
|
|
|
Leader |
LDR
|
|
cam a 00 |
Control # |
1
|
|
2010024156 |
Control # Id |
3
|
|
DLC |
Date |
5
|
|
20231106175844.0 |
Fixed Data |
8
|
|
100618m2011 nyu b 000 0 eng |
LC Card |
10
|
|
$a 2010024156 |
ISBN |
20
|
|
$a9780195392920 (v. 1 : alk. paper) |
ISBN |
20
|
|
$a0195392922 (v. 1 : alk. paper) |
ISBN |
20
|
|
$a9780195392937 (v. 2) |
ISBN |
20
|
|
$a0195392930 (v. 2) |
Local Ctrl # |
35
|
|
$a(OCoLC)ocn642684276 |
Obsolete |
39
|
|
$a280751$cTLC |
Cat. Source |
40
|
|
$aDLC$cDLC$dYDXCP$dC#P$dBWX$dCDX$dDLC$dGCG |
Authen. Ctr. |
42
|
|
$apcc |
Geog. Area |
43
|
|
$an-us--- |
LC Call |
50
|
00 |
$aE169.1$b.A47218 2011 |
Dewey Class |
82
|
00 |
$a973$222 |
Title |
245
|
04 |
$aThe American intellectual tradition /$cedited by David A. Hollinger and Charles Capper. |
Edition |
250
|
|
$a6th ed. |
Imprint |
260
|
|
$aNew York :$bOxford University Press,$c2011. |
Phys Descrpt |
300
|
|
$a2 v. ;$c24 cm. |
Note:Bibliog |
504
|
|
$aIncludes bibliographical references. |
Note:Content |
505
|
0 |
$av. 1. 1630-1865 -- v. 2. 1865 to the present. |
Note:Content |
505
|
00 |
$gVOLUME ONE. PART ONE: THE PURITAN VISION ALTERED. Introduction ; A$t"Modell of Christian charity" (1630) /$rJohn Winthrop ;$gSelection from A$tTreatise of the Covenant of Grace (1636) /$rJohn Cotton ;$gThe$t"Examination of Mrs. Anne Hutchinson at the court at Newtown" (1637) /$rAnne Hutchinson ;$gThe$tBloudy tenent of persecution for cause of conscience (1644) /$rRoger Williams ;$gSelection from$tBonifacius (1710) /$rCotton Mather ;$tEnthusiasm described and caution'd against (1742) /$rCharles Chauncy ;$t"Sinners in the hands of an angry God" (1741) /$rJonathan Edwards ;$gSelection from A$tTreatise concerning religious affections /$rJonathan Edwards --$gPART TWO: REPUBLICAN ENLIGHTENMENT. Introduction ; Selection from The$tAutobiography (1784-88) /$rBenjamin Franklin ;$gA$tDissertaions on the canon and the feudal law (1765) /$rJohn Adams ;$gSelection from$tCommon sense (1776) /$rThomas Paine ;$gThe$tDeclaration of independence (1776) /$rThomas Jefferson ;$t"Constitutional convention speech on a plan of government" (1787) /$rAlexander Hamilton ;$gSelection from$t"Essays of Brutus" (1787-88) /$r"Brutus" ;$gThe$tFederalist, "Number 10" and "Number 51" (1787-88) /$rJames Madison ;$t"On the equality of the sexes (1790) /$rJudith Sargent Murray ;$tLetters to Samuel Adams (October 18, 1790) and to Thomas Jefferson (November 15, 1813; April 19, 1817) /$rJohn Adams $gSelection from$tNotes on the State of Virginia (1787) /$rThomas Jefferson ;$tLetters to John Adams, October 28, 1813; to Benjamin Rush, with a syllabus, April 21, 1803; and to Thomas Law, June 13, 1814 /$rThomas Jefferson --$gPART THREE: PROTESTAN AWAKENING AND DEMOCRATIC ORDER. Introduction ;$t"Unitarian Christianity" (1819) /$rWilliam Ellery Channing ;$tConcio ad clerum (1828) /$rNathaniel William Taylor ;$gSelection from$tLectures on revivals of religion (1835) /$rCharles Grandison Finney ;$gSelection from$tThe Berean /$rJohn Humphrey Noyes ;$gSelection from$tThoughts on African colonization (1832) /$rWilliam Lloyd Garrison ;$t"Prospectus of The Liberator" (1837) /$rWilliam Lloyd Garrison ;$gSelection from$tLetters on the equality of the sexes, and the condition of woman (1838) /$rSarah Grimke ;$gThe$t"Office of the people in art, government, and religion" (1835) /$rGeorge Bancroft ;$gThe$t"Laboring classes (1840) /$rOrestes Brownson ;$gSelection from A$tTreatise on domestic economy (1841) /$rCatherine Beecher ;$gSelection from The$tHarmony of interests (1851) /$rHarry C. Carey --$gPART FOUR: ROMANTIC INTELLECT AND CULTURAL REFORM. Introduction ;$gThe$t"Divinity school address (1838) /$rRalph Waldo Emerson ;$t"Self-reliance" (1841) /$rRalph Waldo Emerson ;$gA$t"Glimpse of Christ's idea of society (1841) /$rElizabeth Palmer Peabody ;$t"Plan of the West Roxbury Community (1842) /$rElizabeth Palmer Peabody ;$gSelection from$tWoman in the nineteenth century (1845) /$rMargaret Fuller ;$t"Resistance to civil government" (1849) /$rHenry David Thoreau ;$t"Christian nurture" (1847) /$rHorace Bushnell ;$t"Hawthorne and his mosses" (1850) /$rHerman Melville --$gPART FIVE: THE QUEST FOR UNION AND RENEWAL. Introduction ;$gSelection from A$tDisquisition on government (c. late 1840s) /$rJohn C. Calhoun ;$t"Enfranchisement of woman" (1852) /$rLouisa McCord ;$gSelection from$tSociology for the south (1854) /$rGeorge Fitzhugh ;$gSelection from The$tCondition, elevation, emigration, and destiny of the colored people of the United States (1852) /$rMartin Delany ;$t"What to the slave is the fourth of July?" (1852) /$rFrederick Douglass ;$t"Speech at Peoria, Illinois (1854) /$rAbraham Lincoln ;$t"Address before the Wisconsin State Agricultural Society" (1859) /$rAbraham Lincoln ;$t"Address delivered at the dedication for the cemetery at Gettysburg" (1863) /$rAbraham Lincoln ;$t"Second inaugural address" (1865) /$rAbraham Lincoln ;$gChronologies. |
Note:Content |
505
|
80 |
$gVOLUME TWO. PART ONE: TOWARD A SECULAR CULTURE. Introduction ;$gSelection from$t"Review of Darwin's On the origin of species" (1860) /$rAsa Gray ;$gSelection from A$t"Plea for culture" (1867) /$rThomas Wentworth Higginson ;$gThe$t"Fixation of belief" (1877) /$rCharles Peirce ;$t"Sociology" (1881) /$rWilliam Graham Sumner ;$gSelection from$tBiblical study (1883) /$rCharles Augustus Briggs ;$t"Mind as a social factor" (1884) /$rLester Frank Ward ;$t"Pernicious fiction" (1887) /$rWilliam Dean Howells ;$gThe$t"Solitude of self" (1892) /$rElizabeth Cady Stanton ;$gThe$t"Significance of the frontier in American history" (1893) /$rFrederick Jackson Turner ;$gThe$t"Will to believe" (1897) /$rWilliam James ;$gThe$t"Problem of Job" (1898) /$rJosiah Royce ;$gSelection from$tWomen and economics (1898) /$rCharlotte Perkins Gilman ;$gThe$t"Dynamo and the virgin" (1907) /$rHenry Adams ;$gThe$t"Genteel tradition in American philosophy" (1913) /$rGeorge Santayana --$gPART TWO: SOCIAL PROGRESS AND THE POWER OF INTELLECT. Introduction ;$gThe$t"Subjective necessity of social settlements" (1892) /$tJane Addams ;$gSelection from The$tTheory of the leisure class (1899) /$rThorstein Veblen ;$gThe$t'Ideals of America (1902) /$rWoodrow Wilson ;$gSelection from The$tSouls of Black folk (1903) /$rW.E.B. Du Bois ;$t"What pragmatism means" (1907) /$rWilliam James ;$gSelection from$tDrift and mastery (1914) /$rWalter Lippmann ;$t"Trans-national America" (1916) /$rRandolph Bourne ;$t"Twilight of idols" (1917) /$rRandolph Bourne ;$t"Puritanism as a literary force" (1917) /$rH.L. Mencken ;$t"Natural law" (1918) /$rOliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. ;$t"Philosophy and democracy" (1918) /$rJohn Dewey ;$gSelection from$tComing of age in Samoa (1928) /$rMargaret Mead ;$gSelection from The$tModern temper (1929) /$rJoseph Wood Krutch ;$t"Reconstucted by unregenerate" (1930) /$rJohn Crowe Ransom ;$t"Communism without dogmas" (1934) /$rSidney Hook --$gPART THREE: TO EXTEND DEMOCRACY AND TO FORMULATE THE MODERN. Introduction ;$t"Avant-garde and kitsch" (1939) /$rClement Greenberg ;$gSelection from$tTVA: Democracy on the march (1994) /$rDavid E. Lilienthal ;$gSelection from An$tAmerican dilemma (1944) /$rGunnar Myrdal ;$gSelection from The$tChildren of light and the children of darkness (1944) /$rReinhold Niebuhr ;$gSelection from$tChildhood and society (1950) /$rErik H. Erikson ;$t"Many thousands gone" (1951) /$rJames Baldwin ;$gSelection from$tAmerican diplomacy, 1900-1950 (1951) /$rGeorge F. Kennan ;$gSelection from$tWitness (1952) /$rWhittaker Chambers ;$t"Ideology and terror" (1953) /$rHannah Arendt ;$gThe$t"Sciences and man's community (1954) /$rJ. Robert Oppenheimer ;$t"Innovation: the new conservatism?" (1959) /$rPeter F. Drucker ;$gSelection from$tWe hold these truths (1960) /$rJohn Courtney Murray ;$gThe$t"End of ideology in the West" (1960) /$rDaniel Bell ;$gSelection from The$tStages of economic growth (1960) /$rW.W. Rostow ;$t"On the teaching of modern literature (1961) /$rLionel Trilling ;$gSelection from$tCapitalism and freedom (1962) /$rMilton Friedman ;$t"Man's rights" (1963) /$rAyn Rand -- PART FOUR: REASSESSING IDENTITIES AND SOLICARITIES. Introduction ;$t"Christianity's third great challenge (1960) /$rWilfred Cantwell Smith ;$t"Resurgent evangelical leadership" (1960) /$rHarold John Ockenga ;$t"Letter to the New Left" (1960) /$rC. Wright Mills ;$t"Revolutionary nationalism and the Afro-American" (1962) /$rHarold Cruse ;$gSelection from The$tStructure of scientific revolutions (1962) /$rThomas S. Kuhn ;$gSelection from The$tFeminine mystique (1963) /$rBetty Friedan /$gSelection from$t"Letter from a Birmingham jail" (1963) /$rMartin Luther King, Jr. ;$t"Against interpretation" (1964) /$rSusan Sontag ;$gSelection from$tOne-dimensional man (1964) /$rHerbert Marcuse ;$gThe$t"Responsibility of intellectuals" (1967) /$rNoam Chomsky ;$gSelection from$tOrientalism (1978) /$rEdward W. Said ;$t"Gender, relation, and a difference in psycholanalytic perspective" (1979) /$rNancy J. Chodorow ;$t"Science as solidarity" (1986) /$rRichard Rorty ;$gThe$t"Idea of an overlapping consensus" (1987) /$rJohn Rawls ;$gSelection from$tFeminism unmodified: discourses on life and law (1987) /$rCatharine MacKinnon ;$gSelection from$tLoose canons: notes on the culture wars (1990) /$rHenry Louis Gates, Jr. ;$gSelection from The$t"Evidence of experience" (1991) /$rJoan W. Scott ;$gThe$t"Clash of civilizations (1993) /$rSamuel P. Huntington ;$gSelection from The$tEnd of the faith (2004) /$rSam Harris ;$gSelection from$tWhole earth discipline: an ecopragmatist manifesto (2009) /$rStewart Brand ;$gChronologies. |
Abstract |
520
|
|
$a"Revised and updated, the sixth edition of this now standard two-volume anthology brings together some of the most historically significan writings in American intellectual history. Uniquely comprehensive, The American Intellectual Tradition includes classic works in philosophy, religion, social theory, political thought, economics, psychology, and cultural and litereary criticism. Organized chronologically into thematic sections, the two volumes trace the evolution of American intellectual writing and thinking from its origins in Puritan beliefs to the most recent essays on diversity and postmodernity. Pedagogical features include introductions and headnotes to the selections, updated bibliographic material throughout, and detailed chronologies at the end of each book."--Back book cover |
Local Note |
590
|
|
$aRecommended in Resources for College Libraries |
Subj:Geog. |
651
|
0 |
$aUnited States$xIntellectual life$vSources. |
Genre/Form |
655
|
7 |
$aPrimary sources.$2lcgft |
AE:Pers Name |
700
|
1 |
$aHollinger, David A. |
AE:Pers Name |
700
|
1 |
$aCapper, Charles. |