An edition of Freedom from fear (1999)

Freedom from fear

the American people in depression and war, 1929-1945

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Last edited by ImportBot
August 5, 2023 | History
An edition of Freedom from fear (1999)

Freedom from fear

the American people in depression and war, 1929-1945

  • 0 Ratings
  • 8 Want to read
  • 2 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Between 1929 and 1945, two great travails were visited upon the American people: the Great Depression and World War II. Freedom from Fear tells the story of how Americans endured, and eventually prevailed, in the face of those unprecedented calamities. David M. Kennedy demonstrates that the economic crisis of the 1930s was more than a reaction to the excesses of the 1920s. For more than a century before the Crash, America's unbridled industrial revolution had gyrated through repeated boom and bust cycles, consuming capital and inflicting misery on city and countryside alike. Nor was the alleged prosperity of the 1920s as uniformly shared as legend portrays. Countless Americans eked out threadbare lives on the margins of national life. Roosevelt's New Deal wrenched opportunity from the trauma of the 1930s and created a lasting legacy of economic and social reform, but it was afflicted with shortcomings and contradictions as well. Kennedy details the New Deal's problems and defeats, as well as its achievements. Yet, even as the New Deal was coping with the Depression, a new menace was developing abroad. Exploiting Germany's own economic burdens, Hitler reached out the disaffected, turning their aimless discontent into loyal support for the Nazi Party. In Asia, Japan harbored imperial ambitions of its own. The same generation of Americans who battled the Depression eventually had to shoulder arms in another conflict that wreaked worldwide destruction, ushered in the nuclear age, and forever changed their way of life and their country's relationship to the rest of the world. In the second installment of the chronicle, the author explains how the nation agonized over its role in the conflict, how it fought the war, and why the U.S. emerged victorious, and why the consequences of victory were sometimes sweet, sometimes ironic. David M. Kennedy analyses the determinants of American strategy, the painful choices faced by commanders and statesmen, and the agonies inflicted on the millions of ordinary Americans who were compelled to swallow their fears and face battle as best they could. - Publisher.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
936

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Freedom from fear
Freedom from fear
2004, Oxford University Press
in English
Cover of: Freedom from Fear
Cover of: Freedom from fear
Freedom from fear: the American people in depression and war, 1929-1945
1999, Oxford University Press
Hardcover in English

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Book Details


Published in

New York

Table of Contents

Editor's introduction
Prologue : November 11, 1918
The American people on the eve of the Great Depression
Panic
The ordeal of Herbert Hoover
Interregnum
The Hundred Days
The ordeal of the American people
Chasing the phantom of recovery
The rumble of discontent
A season for reform
Strike!
The ordeal of Franklin Roosevelt
What the New Deal did
The gathering storm
The agony of neutrality
To the brink
War in the Pacific
Unready ally, uneasy alliance
The war of machines
The struggle for a second front
The battle for Northwest Europe
The cauldron of the home front
Endgame
Epilogue : The world the war made
Bibliographical essay

Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 859-871) and index.

Series
The Oxford history of the United States ;

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
973 s, 973.91
Library of Congress
E173 .O94 vol. 9, E801 .O94 vol. 9, E173.O94 vol. 9, E173 .O94, E173 .O94 1999eb

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover
Pagination
xviii, 936 p., [32] p. of plates
Number of pages
936
Dimensions
25 x x centimeters

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL386794M
ISBN 10
0195038347
ISBN 13
9780195038347
LCCN
98049580, 81009670
OCLC/WorldCat
45844539, 98049580
Library Thing
13391
Goodreads
1063568

First Sentence

"Like an earthquake, the stock market crash of October 1929 cracked startlingly across the United States, the herald of a crisis that was to shake the American way of life to its foundations."

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History

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August 5, 2023 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
March 7, 2023 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
January 7, 2023 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
November 28, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
April 1, 2008 Created by an anonymous user Imported from Scriblio MARC record.