OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

ユーザーログイン

The American West: A Very Short Introduction
The American West: A Very Short Introduction
¥1,793
(税込)
  • Aron has appeared on a number of documentaries and television programs, including several episodes of "Who Do You Think You Are?"
  • Outlines a much longer chronology of the American West than conventional western histories
  • Explores colonial frontiers from the Atlantic to the Pacific and American Wests that were once east of the Mississippi
  • Focuses on convergences of cultures that occurred on frontiers and in multi-ethnic western neighborhoods

  
Part geographical location, part time period, and part state of mind, the American West is a concept often invoked but rarely defined. Though popular culture has carved out a short and specific time and place for the region, author and longtime Californian Stephen Aron tracks "the West" from the building of the Cahokia Mounds around 900 AD to the post-World War II migration to California. His Very Short Introduction stretches the chronology, enlarges the geography, and varies the casting, providing a history of the American West that is longer, larger, and more complicated than popular culture has previously suggested. It is a history of how portions of North America became Wests, how parts of these became American, and how ultimately American Wests became the American West.

Aron begins by describing the expansion of Indian North America in the centuries before and during its early encounters with Europeans. He then explores the origins of American westward expansion from the Seven Years' War to the 1830s, focusing on the western frontier at the time: the territory between the Appalachian Mountains and the Mississippi River. He traces the narrative - temporally and geographically - through the discovery of gold in California in the mid-nineteenth century and the subsequent rush to the Pacific Slope. He shows how the passage of the Newlands Reclamation Act in 1902 brought an unprecedented level of federal control to the region, linking the West more closely to the rest of the United States, and how World War II brought a new rush of population (particularly to California), further raising the federal government's profile in the region and heightening the connections between the West and the wider world. 

Authoritative, lucid, and ranging widely over issues of environment, people, and identity, this is the American West stripped of its myths. The complex convergence of peoples, polities, and cultures that has decisively shaped the history of the American West serves as the key interpretive thread through this Very Short Introduction.

目次: 

List of illustrations
Introduction

Chapter One: The View from Cahokia
Chapter Two: Empires and Enclaves
Chapter Three: Making the First American West
Chapter Four: Taking the Farther West
Chapter Five: The Whitening of the West
Chapter Six: The Watering of the West
Chapter Seven: The Worldly West
Chapter Eight: The View from Mt. Lee
References
Further reading
Index

著者について: 

Stephen Aron, Professor of History and Vice Chair for Academic Personnel, University of California, Los Angeles
 
Stephen Aron is professor of history at UCLA and chair of the Institute for the Study of the American West at the Autry National Center. He is the author of How the West Was Lost: The Transformation of Kentucky from Daniel Boone to Henry Clay and American ConfluenceThe Missouri Frontier from Borderland to Border State, the co-author of Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the World from the Beginnings of Humankind to the Present, and the co-editor of Trading Cultures: The Worlds of Western Merchants.

商品情報

ISBN : 9780199858934

著者: 
Stephen Aron
ページ
160 ページ
フォーマット
Paperback
サイズ
114 x 174 mm
刊行日
2014年11月
カスタマーレビュー
0
(0)

同じカテゴリーの商品

カスタマーレビュー

まだレビューはありません

このページに掲載の「参考価格」は日本国内における希望小売価格です。当ウェブサイトでのご購入に対して特別価格が適用される場合、販売価格は「割引価格」として表示されます。なお、価格は予告なく変更されることがございますので、あらかじめご了承ください。

The American West: A Very Short Introduction

The American West: A Very Short Introduction

The American West: A Very Short Introduction