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| FREEDOM'S
UNFINISHED REVOLUTION AN INQUIRY INTO THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION
The American Social History Project
"Unlike any high-school textbook I
have ever seen. It brings students into the practice of history by demystifying
the historians craft. It invites students to make their own judgments rather
than absorb what historians tell them. Its rich visual materials bring authentic
primary source documents from the Civil War era into the learning process.
It proposes teaching activities, one after another, that ought to overjoy
all teachers who wish to see active learning in their classrooms. If that
wasn't enough, the text is sound as Vermont granite, reflecting the best
scholarship of recent decades. Don't call this a textbook; call it a gold
mine."
All too often, the history of the Civil War is taught in isolation, without reference to Reconstruction or to its broader historical implications. Such an approach obscures the most telling consequences of America's greatest conflict and the links between the 1860s and 1870s and our modern age. While the failures of Reconstruction led to generations of racial injustice, its successes paved the way for the eventual emergence of the modern civil rights movement. Written by the award-winning group that produced the groundbreaking college textbook Who Built America?, Freedom's Unfinished Revolution is an innovative attempt to describe this pivotal period in American history for high-school students. It examines the ways that "ordinary" people--men and women, white and black, Northern and Southern--experienced and shaped the major events of the era. It highlights the vital role of African Americans, whose achievements in this period are often overlooked, though they stood at the center of the national debate. Filled with primary historical documents, including letters, speeches, and excerpts from novels and newspapers, Freedom's Unfinished Revolution offers students a firsthand look at the war and its aftermath: the struggle to rebuild the South and construct a new society. Photographs, engravings, art, and political cartoons are included, as well as pre-reading and discussion questions, critical thinking exercises, timelines, and a glossary.
"Who says we need CD-ROMs and interactive
videos to make the past come alive? Freedom's Unfinished Revolution
proves that history books for young readers can still be exciting and engaging.
Combining original documents with lively prose, powerful illustrations,
and deft insights, the authors have given us a rich, sophisticated account
of what I still believe is the most important revolution in U.S.
history."
"A superb teaching tool. I know of no school text which treats the Civil
War and Reconstruction period with such extraordinary skill and sophistication.
It represents the newest of interpretations, and will provoke students
to think about this era in a profoundly different way. It captures the
drama of those years, enhancing the narrative with short, pungent documents
and wonderful illustrations that make it exciting visually as well as
intellectually. I hope it will be widely used."
"In its first pages, this textbook invites readers to second-guess its
own decision to modify slave dialect. Then it suggests that students question
its photographs. Later it sets students questioning W. E. B. Du Bois and
Abraham Lincoln. Horrors! If enough Americans read Freedom's Unfinished
Revolution, we will face a nation of thinking, questioning citizens."
Available from The New Press |
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