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The Republic for Which It Stands
The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States During Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 | Richard White
3 posts | 1 read | 1 reading | 5 to read
"During Reconstruction Northerners attempted to remake the United States in their own image. They would make incarnate the new world Republicans imagined at the end of the Civil War. That new world seemed possible because the Republican Party controlled the Union in 1865 as fully as any political party would ever control the country. Reconstruction would produce a nation built around free labor with a homogenous citizenry whose rights would be guaranteed by a newly empowered federal government. Black as well as white citizens would inhabit a largely Protestant country of independent producers. They never realized that dream. The government's attempts to implement this vision confronted significant obstacles. Southern whites successfully resisted, and Indians resisted with far less success. Freedpeople both grasped the opportunities that the Republican vision offered them and attempted to articulate their own version of republican America. The United States became a nation of immigrants, Catholic and Jewish as well as Protestant. New technologies transformed the economy, as Americans significantly shifted into wage workers instead of independent producers. Capitalism produced the very rich and the very poor. The Gilded Age thrived where Reconstruction failed, the template of American modernity. The era was full of paradoxes. Notoriously corrupt, it also formed a seedbed of reform. It spawned racial, religious, and social conflicts as deep as the country had seen to date, but a newly diverse nation emerged. The newest volume in the acclaimed Oxford History of the United States series, The Republic for Which It Stands offers a magisterial account of the Gilded Age's real legacy that lies buried beneath its capitalists of legend and its corrupt politicians."--Provided by publisher.
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Yossarian
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“The owner of the Atlantic gave Howells a month off to write one of [Rutherford B. Hayes‘s] campaign biographies, which reads like a book written by a man given a month off to write a book.”

#AuthorOnAuthorSnark #ThrowingShade #RichardWhiteProbablyWritesSlowly

MicrobeMom 😋😂🤣 7y
Maria514626 😆👏😆 7y
75 likes2 comments
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Yossarian
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Sometimes you‘re so excited to start 8 books you want to read in January that you start them early, before you finish the 8 Books you were reading in December.

Then, it appears, you are reading 16 books at once.

ErickaS_Flyleafunfurled And that‘s okay! I support your decision! 7y
drokka Three of those are quite good. (I've not read any of the other 11). Will be interesting to see if you get more than 8 done before New Years. 7y
Cat13 I feel you! i am fighting SO hard not to start anything new... but its so hard lol 7y
See All 12 Comments
Yossarian @drokka Which 3 have you read? 7y
drokka Dark Matter (probably the one I liked the least only because it got a bit Matrix, and my brain doesn't compute that well), Dead Wake, and the Neil Degrasse one. 7y
Yossarian @drokka Based on what I‘ve read so far, I‘d recommend any of them except Hystopia, which is just a mess. 7y
mrozzz KUDOS that is NOT an easy exercise 😉 I find myself in this situation sometimes too... it‘s hard to keep focus when there are so many books on your TBR! 7y
emilyhaldi Impressive!!! 😳 7y
BookNotes 😄😳Dead Wake and Grant are in my TBR stack. 7y
Jess Mr. Split Foot! Love that one. 7y
mara4 Good jop 7y
Munazah I am still Kind a waiting to done with my exams to I can start intense reading again 😕 7y
140 likes1 stack add12 comments
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JWHeyman
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