Progressivism
The American History Series

1. Auflage Januar 2013
150 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
ISBN:
978-0-88295-814-9
John Wiley & Sons
A brief, interpretive analysis of the highly ambitious American reform movements from the 1890s to 1917 that shows progressivism to have been a vital and significant phenomenon although there was no unified progressive movement. Link and McCormick succeed in making the events comprehensible while at the same time conveying a strong sense of the complexity and contradictions of the era.
One: Progressivism in History 1
Who Were the Progressives? 3
The Origins of Progressivism 11
The Character and Spirit of Progressivism 21
Two: A Transformation of Politics and Government 26
Progressivism in the Cities and States 28
Progressivism Moves to Washington 34
The Decline of parties and the Rise of Interest Groups 47
The Transformation of Governance 58
Three: Social Justice and Social Control 67
The Social Progressives 72
The Reforming Professionals 85
The Coercive Progressives 96
Four: Epilogue: The Decline and Endurance of Progressivism 105
Bibliographical Essay 119
Index 141
Who Were the Progressives? 3
The Origins of Progressivism 11
The Character and Spirit of Progressivism 21
Two: A Transformation of Politics and Government 26
Progressivism in the Cities and States 28
Progressivism Moves to Washington 34
The Decline of parties and the Rise of Interest Groups 47
The Transformation of Governance 58
Three: Social Justice and Social Control 67
The Social Progressives 72
The Reforming Professionals 85
The Coercive Progressives 96
Four: Epilogue: The Decline and Endurance of Progressivism 105
Bibliographical Essay 119
Index 141
"In this brief volume, Arthur Link and Richard L. McCormick have succeeded admirably in providing a stimulating overview of the various forces that served to shape the spirit and ideology of the progressive movement. ...they focus sharply on the array of ideological currents that variously characterized progressivism, thus giving it a texture that makes this dynamic reform period in American history much easier to understand." (The History Teacher, May 1994)
"Link and McCormick have covered a vast area, compressing much
information into a short space with no sense of the
scissor-and-paste technique. Students should be stimulated to read
more deeply; teachers familiar with the period and the literature
will be impressed, perhaps dismayed, at how well the authors
summarize in a clear paragraph or two what it takes some of us
several weeks to get through in class."
-Paul L. Silver, Teaching History, Volume 9, No. 1, Spring
1984
"Link and McCormick have covered a vast area, compressing much
information into a short space with no sense of the
scissor-and-paste technique. Students should be stimulated to read
more deeply; teachers familiar with the period and the literature
will be impressed, perhaps dismayed, at how well the authors
summarize in a clear paragraph or two what it takes some of us
several weeks to get through in class."
-Paul L. Silver, Teaching History, Volume 9, No. 1, Spring
1984
Arthur Stanley Link was an American historian and educator, known as the leading authority on U.S. President Woodrow Wilson. Richard Levis McCormick is a historian, professor and president emeritus of Rutgers University.