1 / 50

Chapter 42

Chapter 42. The American People Face a New Century. APUSH Historical Thinking Skill. The Conservative Era (1980-????) Age of Globalization (1990-????) Age of Technology (1990-????) Age of Terrorism (2001-????) Demographic Change Era (2008-????). PERIODIZATION. I. Economic Revolutions.

agooding
Download Presentation

Chapter 42

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 42 The American People Face a New Century

  2. APUSH Historical Thinking Skill The Conservative Era (1980-????)Age of Globalization (1990-????)Age of Technology (1990-????)Age of Terrorism (2001-????)Demographic Change Era (2008-????) PERIODIZATION

  3. I. Economic Revolutions • Steel 1800s • US Steel • Mass consumer goods 1900s • Automobiles (GM) • Electronics (GE) • Information / communication 1950s • Computers (IBM) • Software (Microsoft) • Internet (Goggle) • Biological/genetic engineering • cloning

  4. p991

  5. II. Affluence and Inequality • Americans an affluent people • Higher standard of living than 2/3 people • But no longer the world’s wealthiest people • Widening income inequality • The tax and fiscal policies favored the wealthy • More global economic competition • Fewer high-paying manufacturing jobs • The decline of unions • Educated men and women to marry one another Limited Educational opportunities • Poor schools in poor areas • Increasing college costs

  6. Money Magazine July 2014

  7. p994

  8. p995

  9. Figure 42-2 p995

  10. III. The Feminist Revolution • Women in the workplace: • 1900 women made up about 20% of the workforce • 2000 women made up ~47% of workers • Wider range of jobs, more educational opportunities • Yet many feminists remained frustrated: • Women continued to received lower wages • Concentrate in low-prestige, low-paying occupations • Sexual discrimination • Role of motherhood • Most voted for Democrats: • “Gender gap”

  11. p997

  12. p997

  13. p997

  14. IV. New Families and Old • Traditional family suffers • ~50% of marriages ended in divorce • Divorce rates peaked in 1980s • People marrying later • ~41% of births to unwed mother • Teen births peaked in 1990s • ~25% of children live with one parent • The pauperization of many women & children • More “parent-substitutes” • To day care centers, schools, TV, internet • Viable families now assumed a variety of forms • Single parent, step, grandparent, multigenerational • Gay marriages/parents

  15. V. The Aging of America • Americans were living longer • Medical advances lengthened & strengthened lives • One American in eight was over 65 in 2009 • Political, social, and economic concerns • They vote more than anyone • Increasing Medicare / Social Security costs • “Third rail” of politics

  16. p999

  17. Figure 42-4 p999

  18. VI. The New Immigration • 1 million immigrants per year (~0.33%) • Less European, more Asian and Latin American • Reasons to immigrate to America • Same reason as before • Left countries with rapidly growing populations • For new jobs and economic opportunity • Southwest felt the immigrant impact more Latinos • Mexican-American have created a cultural zone • Critics of immigration • Robb citizens of jobs, increase taxpayers expense • Unscrupulous employers take advantage

  19. p1002

  20. p1003

  21. p1003

  22. Figure 42-6 p1003

  23. VII. Beyond the Melting Pot • Latinos - increasingly important minority • Largest minority, since 2003 • Increasing political power • Asian Americans • America’s fastest growing minority, since mid-1980s • Political influence small but growing • Indians, the original Americans • Half have left the reservations to live in cities • Special legal status allowed gambling • Poverty/Unemployment/alcoholism problems

  24. p1004

  25. VIII. Cities and Suburbs • American cities • Crime since late 1980s • “Urban flight” was swift • “Urban age” (1920-1990) • U.S. A suburban nation • Economy & Jobs became suburbanized • Fragmentation and isolation in American life • Divided by wealth and race • Suburbs grew faster in the West and Southwest • Some major cities exhibited signs of renewal • New York, Boston, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles

  26. IX. Minority America • Racial tensions exacerbated urban situations • LA riots of 1992 and 1995 • Minorities mostly lived in cities • Successful minorities moved to suburbs • Leaving behind urban problems • Unemployment • Drug addiction, • Single parent homes • Poverty • Poor educational opportunities • More blacks elected to state, local, fed offices • Assault against affirmative action

  27. p1006

  28. X. E Pluribus Plures • Tradition and “multiculturalism” • “Cultural pluralists” vs “Eurocentric” • Classrooms became battlegrounds • Melting pot vs salad bowl

  29. XI. The Postmodern Mind • Americans more books, music, and education • Educated people advance economy & culture • Postmodernism • A distrust of rational, scientific descriptions • Influences philosophy, art, architecture, and more • Postmodern literature • Burroughs, Vonnegut, Chabon, Wallace, Morrison • Postmodern theater • Tony Kushner, Angels in America (1991) • Jonathan Larson Rent (1996) • Nilo Cruz Anna in the Tropics (2003)

  30. p1008

  31. p1009

  32. p1009

  33. XII. The New Media • Internet • Created by gov’t for Cold War intelligence sharing • Spread into American homes, schools, offices • Reshaped the economy, education, corporate world • Internet democratizing effect • More interaction • Social-networking • Internet lowering effect • Americans became ever less willing to read • 24-hour news cycle a reality • Allowed little people to have a big voice

  34. p1011

  35. XIII. The American Prospect • Problems that confronted the Republic • Women don’t have first-class economic citizenship • Civil rights for different groups • Political paralysis (divided gov’t, hyperpartisanship) • Americans fear for their economy • Environmental worries Energy costs / reliability • Urban sprawl/renewal • Terrorism (security vs privacy) • American role nurturing progress abroad

  36. Can you use ‘history’ to… Predict the future? Prepare for the future? Improve the future?

More Related