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Crusader Nation: The United States in Peace and the Great War, 1898-1920
 
 
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Crusader Nation: The United States in Peace and the Great War, 1898-1920 [Hardcover]

David Traxel (Author)


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Book Description

0375410783 978-0375410789 January 24, 2006 First Edition
In this absorbing history of the first two decades of the twentieth century, David Traxel paints a vivid picture of a transformative period in the United States, when many remarkable individuals fought to decide which path the country would follow. Victorian restraint was being cast aside by men and women testing social conventions and sexual mores, dancing to dangerous “jazz” music, and expressing themselves through revolutionary forms of art.

Traxel traces how these modern ideas were also related to a powerful progressive reform movement that hoped to end the social evils that had accompanied unrestrained industrialization, and he examines the impact of huge waves of European immigration on both the American economy and its social fabric. The struggles to end child labor, win votes for women, rid cities of corrupt political machines, improve public health and education, and prohibit alcohol brought forth a passionate response from millions of Americans who desired both a more efficient and a more compassionate society. Greenwich Village bohemians including Jack Reed, Eugene O’Neill, and Louise Bryant; politicians such as Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson; social reformers Margaret Sanger and “Mother” Jones; journalists William Allen White and Lincoln Steffens; and industrialist Henry Ford come alive in these pages. They were Democrats and Republicans, progressives and Socialists, as well as radicals such as the Industrial Workers of the World and anarchists such as Emma Goldman.

Combining lively anecdote with historical scholarship, Traxel shows how American crusading continued through World War I, though now focused on “making the world safe for democracy.” But by the time the doughboys returned the public was tired of what had come to seem empty rhetoric and unattainable goals. By 1920 the Progressive Era was over, though its laws and effects have lived on. This portrait of early twentieth-century America reveals important qualities of our national character that endure to this day.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In an elegant and substantive narrative history, Traxel (1898: The Birth of the American Century) recreates America during the Progressive Era, a time when politicians, church leaders and ordinary citizens were on fire to reform society. Traxel looks at labor organizers like Mary "Mother" Jones, suffragists and prohibitionists (whom he simplistically dismisses as "small-town, self-righteous bluenoses"). Woodrow Wilson, whose presidency threads through this book, oversaw business and banking regulation. Victorian sexual mores gave way, divorce became more commonplace. Traxel suggests that America's crusading impulses were partially responsible for the country's entry into WWI, and ironically, the war quenched the nation's reforming zeal. Soldiers returned disillusioned and unable to find jobs: "[l]ike the rest of the country, they increasingly felt that they owed only themselves." And so began an optimism about business and a determination to kick back and have fun that would carry America through the next decade. Traxel's approach is not especially original, and he overlooks the experience of African-Americans. Nonetheless, the book reads seamlessly, and it will serve a scholarly and general audience as a summary of an important era in U.S. history. 19 b&w photos. (Jan. 30)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Traxel, the author of 1898: The Birth of the American Century (1998), tackles the Progressive Era in this comprehensive overview of one of the most socially significant periods in American history. Picking up where his last narrative left off, he introduces readers to an America on the cusp of tremendous social, political, and economic change. A nationwide zeal for reform was nurtured by a group of Progressive thinkers disillusioned with the inequitable strictures and constraints of both the Victorian era and the Gilded Age. Ushering in a new epoch of social consciousness, Populist reformers were able to promulgate agendas that included revising child labor laws, busting corporate monopolies, introducing unions to many industries, and pursuing the seemingly elusive goal of universal suffrage for women. Unfortunately, the stark reality of World War I and its bleak aftermath brought a temporary halt to the crusade, but not before collective tangible and intangible social leaps had been made in communities all across the U.S. Margaret Flanagan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; First Edition edition (January 24, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0375410783
  • ISBN-13: 978-0375410789
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.6 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,274,964 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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