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What is History?

When you hear word “history,” you probably think of the last history class you took. If it was a high school history survey class, then you may think in broad terms of global history or in narrower terms and think of an American history survey course. Whatever image comes to mind, you probably think of a fairly broad topic that describes past events. History may seem dead, dry, or boring to you because it focuses on past events and past people and sometimes seems to have little modern-day relevance. However, history is much more than a study of the past. By studying the past, you can make connections to modern day events. In fact, in some ways, studying the past helps you predict the future.

For students in American high schools, colleges, and universities, American history is a pretty standard subject. While the details of American history are so rich that they can be studied in specialized courses like African American history or the history of women’s health, most students will begin with a broad overview of American history. In fact, this overview is what is tested on the AP American history test. Students wishing to be successful on that exam, or in any survey course of American history, need to be familiar with basics like: the European discovery of the New World; settlement of the New World by English, Spanish and French explorers; the role that religion played in settlement and colonization; the New England Colonies; the Middle, Chesapeake and Southern Colonies; the French and Indian War; the American Revolution; the writing of the Constitution and the development of the modern U.S. political system; the War of 1812; the rise of cotton in the South and the role slavery played in the development as cotton as the major industry of the South; the concept of Manifest Destiny; the removal of Native Americans/ Indians from their historic lands; the Civil War; the abolition of slavery; Reconstruction; the end of Reconstruction; the Trail of Tears; the role of the United States in World War I and World War II; the Industrial Revolution; Black Friday; the Great Depression; the Dust Bowl; the Korean War; the Vietnam War; the 1960s Civil Rights Movement; and the Cold War. In depth courses could focus on any one of those topics or even a sub-topic within those topics and describe the history in greater detail.

World history will focus on different issues, including an examination of how the major world religions influenced events in history and helped shape the modern world. While these big events and major themes help describe how history was shaped, they do not tell the whole story. In fact, what history buffs love about history is that virtually every topic can be explored in greater detail. If you need more information about the role that specific groups played in a historical event, how events impacted different people and places, or the interaction between different events in history, we can provide custom research that helps illuminate those hidden parts of history. [ Show Less ]

 

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Paper Doctorate
Communion Describe the Gender-Specific Relationship Between Men,
Five page essay on Bell Hooks's book Communion. The five questions include: 1. Describe the gender-specific relationship between men, women and love. How is it different? Why? How does gender socialization contribute to these masculine and feminine roles in relationship to love and relationships in general? 2. Explain hooks' statement on p.105, 'Nothing belies the assumption that men and women are more loving than men as much as the negative feelings most females hold about our bodies.” 3. bell hooks writes that 'self-love is always risky for women with in patriarchy.” Explain. 4. Pick any section/topic in the book and explain why you enjoyed it/found it interesting and insightful/could relate to it. 5. How does hooks define and describe love? How does her definition align with, contradict and/or expand cultural notions of love? Be specific.
Paper Doctorate
Rise of the Papacy
The Roman Catholic church has a place in history that can be rivaled by very few beliefs. The papacy was able to gain power through the rise, and also because of the fall of the Roman empire, and they were also able to hold that power, largely uninterrupted into the sixteenth century. This paper examines the rising dominance of the papacy and, shortly, how it is viewed today.
Paper Doctorate
Robert Hayden, One of the Most Important
Robert Hayden, one of the most important black poets of the 20th Century, was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1913 and grew up in extreme poverty in a racially mixed neighborhood. His parents divorced when he was a child and he was raised by their neighbors, William and Sue Ellen Hayden, and not until he was in his forties did he learn that Asa Sheffey and Gladys Finn were his biological parents. During the Great Depression he was employed for two years by the Federal Writer's Project, and published his first volume of poetry Heart-Shape in the Dust in 1940
Paper Doctorate
International management concepts and practices
The paper is an international management paper focusing particularly on the aspects of tourism. The paper focuses primarily on cultural tourism and how the promotion of culture can inadvertently promote tourism to a particular destination. The paper also discusses the different customer behaviors and how these influence the cultural tourism advertising techniques.
Paper Doctorate
Asian Resources and Economic Power
Asia has always been a centre of attention in world's politics. A single decision made by one of the Asian countries has a tendency of altering the world's political and economic scenery. A change in Afghanistan changed the perception about world's security and enunciated an on-going war of peace. Similarly, China's growth has altered economic policies of many countries in the world. Hence, whatever takes place in Asia shakes the world to its roots. This region has a lot of importance from economic point of view. However, even internally, there is a constant struggle in Asian countries for power and this battle is supported by the resources they have. Who has the most and knows how to use it, will decide the fate of this region.
Paper Doctorate
Israeli strike on Iran: analysis and implications
This is a thesis on Israeli-Iranian conflict. It mainly examines the reasons why Israel will attack Iran as a thesis. The paper highlights various reasons including; the fact that Israel Leadership believes Iran will attack, it also believes that no Country is able to stop Iran. Israel also believes it has the international support as well as its track record in the success attack on Iraq and Syria among other reasons.
Paper Undergraduate
How Visual Media Shape Collective Memory
According to Barbie Zelizer's review of the book Realms of memory, the simple question: "What does it mean to be French" is the focus of all three volumes of the massive cultural history of the nation (Zelizer 1999: 201).
Essay Masters
Charles W. Chesnutt: life and literary contributions
An analysis of unifying themes in Charles W. Chesnutt's "The Passing of Grandison" and "The Free Colored People of North Carolina." On the one hand, Chesnutt demonstrates how slave owner's ignorance can work against them. On the other hand, Chesnutt seeks to educate the reader about how the black community has been affected after the Civil War and how industry has changed now that slave labor is no longer used.
Paper Doctorate
Monogamy as a Rational Social Practice What
We as humans have been programmed in a way so as to believe that the morally and socially expectable pattern of marriage remains to be monogamy. But let's first define what we actually mean by monogamy. What this concept really means is to have just one sexual partner at a time or more appropriately, having just one life partner. This may refer to being with one person in your entire life or at least one person at a time. For much of the history of mankind, this has been a default relationship that one is supposed to follow. Some ancient cultures did have other practices such as polygamy or bigamy but this was just the preferable pattern of things. The concept of monogamy evolved so as to provide a balanced life to the children as they would have a better life if both the parents had a certain amount of contribution in bringing them up. It was noticed that any intruder into the relationship or any problems that existed had quite a lot of impact on the children and this created an imbalanced socialization process for them. Hence, it was established that monogamy was the perfect relationship and that should be kept intact in order to have a perfectly balanced and stable society (Fisher).
Paper Doctorate
Lessons from The Making of a Quagmire: Afghanistan war strategy and counterterrorism
In his eerily prescient analysis of America's calamitous excursion into the jungles of Vietnam, entitled The Making of a Quagmire: America and Vietnam during the Kennedy Era, war correspondent and author David Halberstam demonstrates the inexorable influence of historic recurrence on modern events. Although only thirty years of age at the time of his reporting, Halberstam harnesses lessons learned through centuries of human conflict, focusing his penetrating perceptive skills on the defining event of his era: the Vietnam War. In doing so, Halberstam penned a devastating indictment of the American government's foreign policy, denouncing the military's overt displays of hubris and damning the entire endeavor with the derisive label quagmire; one which would forever after be used to describe futility in the realm of armed conflict.