American Progressivism: A ReaderRonald J. Pestritto, William Atto Lexington Books, 2 Mei 2008 - 340 halaman American Progressivism is a one-volume edition of some of the most important essays, speeches, and book excerpts from the leading figures of national Progressivism. It is designed for classroom use, includes an accessible interpretive essay, and introduces each selection with a brief historical and conceptual background. The introductory essay is written with the student in mind, and addresses the important characteristics of Progressive thought and the role of Progressives in the development of the American political tradition. Students of American political thought, American politics, American history, the presidency, Congress, and political parties will find this reader to be an invaluable source for insight into Progressivism. |
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Halaman 2
... theory and practice of American government. It is because of the coherent set of principles that characterizes this movement that leads us to think of it as an “-ism” as much as we think of it as an “era.” The meaning of progressivism ...
... theory and practice of American government. It is because of the coherent set of principles that characterizes this movement that leads us to think of it as an “-ism” as much as we think of it as an “era.” The meaning of progressivism ...
Halaman 4
... theory and on the notion that the fundamental purpose of government is to secure the individual natural rights of citizens. While most of the founders and nearly all ordinary Americans did not sub— scribe to the radical epistemology of ...
... theory and on the notion that the fundamental purpose of government is to secure the individual natural rights of citizens. While most of the founders and nearly all ordinary Americans did not sub— scribe to the radical epistemology of ...
Halaman 5
... theory, Dewey argued, “blinded the eyes of liberals to the fact that their own special interpretations of liberty, individuality and intelligence were themselves historically conditioned, and were relevant only to their own time. They ...
... theory, Dewey argued, “blinded the eyes of liberals to the fact that their own special interpretations of liberty, individuality and intelligence were themselves historically conditioned, and were relevant only to their own time. They ...
Halaman 6
... theory and their organic or “living” notion of the national state. Wilson, in reflecting on what it meant to be a progressive, wrote of government as a “living thing,” which was to be understood according to “the theory of organic life ...
... theory and their organic or “living” notion of the national state. Wilson, in reflecting on what it meant to be a progressive, wrote of government as a “living thing,” which was to be understood according to “the theory of organic life ...
Halaman 7
... theory socialism and democracy are almost if not quite one and the same. They both rest at bottom upon the absolute ... theories of self- government, such as the republicanism to which the American founders subscribed and of which Wilson ...
... theory socialism and democracy are almost if not quite one and the same. They both rest at bottom upon the absolute ... theories of self- government, such as the republicanism to which the American founders subscribed and of which Wilson ...
Isi
1 | |
Part I THE PRINCIPLES OF PROGRESSIVISM | 33 |
Chapter 02 Who Is a Progressive? | 35 |
From The New Freedom Chapter 2 | 45 |
Chapter 04 The American Conception of Liberty | 55 |
Part II PROGRESSIVE INTERPRETATIONS OF HISTORY | 65 |
Chapter 05 The Significance of theFrontier in American History | 67 |
From An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States Chapter 1 | 91 |
Part V NATIONAL ADMINISTRATION | 189 |
Chapter 16 The Study of Administration | 191 |
Chapter 17 The New Nationalism | 211 |
Part VI PARTIES AND DIRECT DEMOCRACY | 225 |
From La Follettes Autobiography Chapter 8 | 227 |
Chapters 12 and 13 | 239 |
Chapter 20 The Right of the People to Rule | 251 |
From Progressive Democracy Chapter 16 | 261 |
Part III SOCIAL JUSTICE SOCIAL GOSPEL AND EDUCATION | 97 |
From Twenty Years at HullHouse Chapter 6 | 99 |
From Christianizing the Social Order Part II Chapter 6 | 107 |
From Christianizing the Social Order Part VI Chapter 3 | 117 |
Chapter 10 My Pedagogic Creed | 125 |
Unsigned Editorial in The New Republic | 135 |
Part IV LEADERSHIP AND THE AMERICAN PRESIDENCY | 139 |
Chapter 12 Leaders of Men | 141 |
From Constitutional Government in the United States Chapter 3 | 153 |
Chapter 14 Inaugural Address 1905 | 171 |
From An Autobiography Chapter 10 | 175 |
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