HIS 204 ASH Course Tutorials/ Uoptutorial

HIS 204 ASH Course Tutorials/ Uoptutorial

  • Submitted By: Konoha17
  • Date Submitted: 12/11/2014 10:16 PM
  • Category: Business
  • Words: 7405
  • Page: 30
  • Views: 1

HIS 204 ENTIRE COURSE

For more course tutorials visit
www.uoptutorial.com


HIS 204 Week 1 DQ 1 The History of Reconstruction
HIS 204 Week 1 DQ 2 The Industrial Revolution
HIS 204 Week 1 Quiz
HIS 204 Week 2 DQ 1 The Progressive Movement
HIS 204 Week 2 DQ 2 America's Age of Imperialism
HIS 204 Week 2 Quiz
HIS 204 Week 2 Paper The Progressive Presidents
HIS 204 Week 3 DQ 1 Normalcy and the New Deal
HIS 204 Week 3 DQ 2 The End of Isolation
HIS 304 Week 3 Quiz
HIS 204 Week 3 Final Paper Preparation (Native American history)
HIS 204 Week 4 DQ 1 A Single American Nation
HIS 204 Week 4 DQ 2 Cold War
HIS 204 Week 4 Quiz
HIS 204 Week 5 DQ 1 The Age of Reagan
HIS 204 Week 5 DQ 2 The Lived Experience of Ordinary People
HIS 204 Week 5 Final Paper Native American history

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

HIS 204 Week 1 DQ 1 The History of Reconstruction

For more course tutorials visit
www.uoptutorial.com

The History of Reconstruction. Many Americans like to imagine the history of their nation as one of continual progress. While acknowledging that not all persons and groups enjoyed equal rights at all times, Americans often take it for granted that American history moves in only one direction: toward greater rights, greater freedom, and greater equality. This perspective makes it difficult for many Americans to understand the Reconstruction period and to place it in a broader historical narrative. The problem they face is that African Americans from roughly 1867 to 1875 enjoyed far more political influence and equal rights than they ever had before, or ever would again until the end of the modern Civil Rights Movement almost a century later. The fact that a group could be stripped of rights it once enjoyed is difficult for many Americans to accept, and so they often retreat into a false narrative, in which African Americans never gained any rights at all, and were abandoned to...

Similar Essays