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Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide.

Print Price: $50.99

Format:
Paperback
112 pp.
8.5" x 11"

ISBN-13:
9780190921668

Copyright Year:
2019

Imprint: OUP US


Mapping United States History

Coloring and Exercise Book, Volume Two: since 1865

Michael McGerr, Jan Ellen Lewis, James Oakes, Nick Cullather, Mark Summers, Camilla Townsend, and others

Designed specifically to accompany Of the People: A History of the United States, Fourth Edition by Michael McGerr, Jan Ellen Lewis, James Oakes, Nick Cullather, Mark Summers, Camilla Townsend, and Karen M. Dunak, Mapping United States History includes 35 reference maps and 50 outline maps. The reference maps in the first half of the workbook provide students with support tools to better understand the movement of people and ideas in United States history, while the outline maps in the second half of the workbook provides exercises to deepen an understanding of the connection between geography and historical change. Affordable and flexible, Mapping United States History makes for an ideal companion to Of the People.

Please contact your local Oxford University Press representative to learn about discounted pricing when Mapping United States History is bundled with Of the People.

Readership : Freshmen/Sophomores taking United States History survey courses.

Introduction
Reference Maps:
Population and Urbanization 1900
Major Population Movements 1500-1914
Westward Expansion 1835-1890
US Influence in Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean 1898-1933
Share of World Manufacturing Output in 1900
International Investment 1914
World War I in Europe and the Middle East 1914-1918
The Peace of Paris in Central and Eastern Europe 1920
The Great Depression
Countries on the Gold Standard 1929-34
The Expansion of Nazi Germany 1933-1939
World War II in Europe, North Africa, and the Soviet Union 1939-1945
World War II in the Pacific 1937-1945
Regional Alliances 1948-1955
Cuban Missile Crisis 1962
Decolonization in Africa and Asia
Civil Rights Demonstrations 1955-1968
Urban Riots in the United States 1965-1970
The Korean War 1950-53
The Vietnam War
OPEC, Oil, and Geopolitics 1973
Equal Rights Amendment Vote by State 1972-78
The United States as "Globocop" 1979-2014
The Three Bloc International Economy in the Early 1990s
Women Elected to Congress 1937-2009
Women in Employment 1990s
Post-Cold War Eastern Europe and Central Asia
The Breakup of Yugoslavia
The Richest 20 Countries 1950 / 1970 / 1990 / 2010
Conflict in West and Central Asia 2001-2017
Drug Trafficking Routes from Latin America to the United States 2018
A New Global Age
The Global Environment of the Early Twenty-First Century
Outline Maps:
Find Your Place in the World
Military Districts Established by the Reconstruction Acts, 1867
Sharecropping, c. 1880
Travel Times by Railroad in 1870
Conflict and Resistance in the American West, 1860-1890
Distribution of Major American Industries, ca. 1890
Global Migrations, 1840-1900
Percentage of Population Foreign Born in 1880 and Largest Cities in 1900
The United States in Latin America, 1898-1934
The Growth of National Parks, 1872-1920
Women's Suffrage Around the World
World War I
Europe after the Treaty of Versailles, 1919
The Great Migration, 1910-1940
The Dust Bowl, 1933-1940
World War II in the Pacific, 1942-1945
World War II in Europe, 1942-1945
The Division of Postwar Europe
The Korean War, 1950-1953
The Growth of the Sunbelt and the Interstate Highway System
The Struggle for Civil Rights
Race Riots, 1965-1968
The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
The Vietnam War
Manufacturing Jobs and Population Change, 1970-1980
The Oil Crisis of 1973
Women's Rights in the 1970s and 1980s
Evangelical Christianity and the Moral Majority
The Late Cold War and the Collapse of the Soviet Union
US Military Involvement in the Middle East since 2001
Aging America / Uninsured America
Multicultural America
Rich and Poor in America

There are no Instructor/Student Resources available at this time.

Michael McGerr is the Paul V. McNutt Professor of History at Indiana University-Bloomington. He is the author of The Decline of Popular Politics: The American North, 1865-1928 (1986) and A Fierce Discontent: The Rise and Fall of the Progressive Movement, 1870-1920 (2003), both from Oxford University Press. He is writing "The Public Be Damned": The Kingdom and the Dream of the Vanderbilts. The recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities, Professor McGerr has won numerous teaching awards at Indiana, where his courses include the US Survey; War in Modern American History; Rock, Hip Hop, and Revolution; Big Business; The Sixties; and American Pleasure. He has previously taught at Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He received his BA, MA, and PhD from Yale.

James Oakes has published several books and numerous articles on slavery and antislavery in the nineteenth century, including The Radical and the Republican: Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, and the Triumph of Antislavery Politics (2007), winner of the Lincoln Prize in 2008. Professor Oakes is Distinguished Professor of History and Graduate School Humanities Professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. In 2008 he was a fellow at the Cullman Center at the New York Public Library. His new book is Freedom National: The Destruction of Slavery in the United States (February 2013).

Jan Ellen Lewis is Professor of History and Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Rutgers University-Newark. She also teaches in the history PhD program at Rutgers, New Brunswick, and was a visiting professor of history at Princeton. A specialist in colonial and early national history, she is the author of The Pursuit of Happiness: Family and Values in Jefferson's Virginia (1983) as well as numerous articles and reviews. She has coedited An Emotional History of the United States (1998), Sally Hemings and Thomas Jefferson: History, Memory, and Civic Culture (1999), and The Revolution of 1800: Democracy, Race, and the New Republic (2002). She has served as president of the Society of Historians of the Early American Republic, as chair of the New Jersey Historical Commission, and on the editorial board of the American Historical Review. She is an elected member of the Society of American Historians and the American Antiquarian Society. She received her AB from Bryn Mawr College and MAs and PhD from the University of Michigan.

Nick Cullather is a historian of US foreign relations at Indiana University-Bloomington. He is author of three books on nation building: The Hungry World (2010), a story of foreign aid, development, and science; Illusions of Influence (1994), on US-Philippines relations; and Secret History (1999 and 2006), a history of the CIA's overthrow of the Guatemalan government in 1954. He received his PhD from the University of Virginia.

Mark Summers is the Thomas D. Clark Professor of History at the University of Kentucky-Lexington. In addition to various articles, he has written Railroads, Reconstruction, and the Gospel of Prosperity (1984), The Plundering Generation (1988), The Era of Good Stealings (1993), The Press Gang (1994), The Gilded Age; or, The Hazard of New Functions (1997), Rum, Romanism and Rebellion (2000), Party Games (2004), and A Dangerous Stir (2009). At present, he has just completed a book about a Tammany politician, Big Tim and the Tiger. He is now writing a survey of Reconstruction and a book about 1868. He teaches the American history survey (both halves), the Gilded Age, the Progressive Era, the Age of Jackson, Civil War and Reconstruction, the British Empire (both halves), the Old West (both halves), a history of political cartooning, and various graduate courses. He earned his BA from Yale and his PhD from the University of California-Berkeley.

Camilla Townsend is Professor of History at Rutgers University-New Brunswick. She is the author of five books, among them Annals of Native America (2016), Malintzin's Choices: An Indian Woman in the Conquest of Mexico (2006) and Pocahontas and the Powhatan Dilemma (2004), and she is the editor of American Indian History: A Documentary Reader (2010). The recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, she has also won awards at Rutgers and at Colgate, where she used to teach. Her courses at the graduate and undergraduate level cover the colonial history of the Americas, as well as Native American history, early and modern. She received her BA from Bryn Mawr and her PhD from Rutgers.

Karen M. Dunak is Associate Professor of History at Muskingum University in New Concord, Ohio. She is the author of As Long as We Both Shall Love: The White Wedding in Postwar America (2013), published by New York University Press. She currently is working on a book about media representations of and responses to Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. Her courses include the US Survey, Women in US History, Gender and Sexuality in US History, and various topics related to modern US history. She earned her BA from American University and her PhD from Indiana University.

Of the People with Sources Volume 2 since 1865 - Michael McGerr, Jan Ellen Lewis, James Oakes, Nick Cullather, Mark Summers, Camilla Townsend, and others
Of the People Volume 2 since 1865 - Michael McGerr, Jan Ellen Lewis, James Oakes, Nick Cullather, Mark Summers, Camilla Townsend, and others
Sources for of the People - Maxwell Johnson

Special Features

  • Provides coloring, labeling, and other exercises to strengthen students' geographical and spatial-learning skills.
  • Designed specifically to accompany Of the People.
  • Includes 35 color reference maps.
  • Includes 50 outline map exercises.
  • The outline maps are perforated so students can turn them in for grading.
  • An answer key for instructors is available at OUP's Ancillary Resource Center (https://oup-arc.com).
  • The map workbook is free when packaged with Of the People.