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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 Undergraduate
Burke-Litwin, Congruence & McKinsey 7S Models Applied
The paper topic here revolves around the Organizational Diagnostic Models 7S model. It also revolves around the Burke-Litwin Model. The paper highlights the strengths and the weaknesses of both models and then chooses one that would be the most suitable for the company Whole Foods Market while also making recommendations.
Essay Doctorate
Do Gang Members Come From Unstable Households?
Abstract There exists a wide range of reasons as to why individuals join gangs. Reasons in this case could include but are not limited to the need for protection, economic gain, peer pressure as well as familial instability. In this text, I highlight the existing reasons as to why most gang members come from unstable households.
Paper Undergraduate
British Colonial Policy in Burma and China Compared
Geographically, Burma lies in a position of a natural trade rout and strategic centralized hub between two very desirable European trade locations, China and India. As, and independent monarchy, with heavy Chinese and…
Paper Undergraduate
Accessibility and Declining Patronage in the Performing Arts
This study attempts to address the recent decline in arts patronage with an eye towards its underlying factors. While recent research has focused on the mix of economic pressures which have resulted in decreased funding for the arts, this research has frequently failed to investigate the attitudes and perceptions which inform these economic decisions. In order to bridge this critical lacuna, this study examines the different barriers to participation in the arts and determines that the recent decline is the result of practical and perceptual barriers to participation that engage in a vicious cycle wherein misinformed attitudes towards art precipitate decreased public and private support, which then serves perpetuate these attitudes. Stepping outside this cycle in order to reverse the decline requires an honest assessment of art's benefits and which benefits should be included when making appeals for greater patronage and support.
Paper Doctorate
Laboring Women: Reproduction and Gender in New World Slavery
Jennifer L. Morgan's book Laboring Women: Reproduction and Gender in New World Slavery discusses what happened when black women were brought to the New World, leaving their homes in Africa and being forced into slavery.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Joseph Warton's Nature Poetry: Primitivism and the Sublime
Nature Observed in Warton's "The Enthusiast: or, the Lover of Nature" and "Ode to Evening."
Paper Undergraduate
Political Violence in Latin America After World War II
During the second half of the twentieth century, the Latin American countries were shaken by numerous violent acts in their political life. There were revolutions, coups d'etat, civil war, terrorism and other forms of…
Paper Undergraduate
Peronism in Argentina: Definition, Ideology, and Legacy
South America in general, like all of the Western Hemisphere, has been the site of great political turbulence throughout the nineteenth and much of the twentieth century, and many of the problems in the area that arose…
Paper Doctorate
The Great Gatsby: Marxist, Feminist, and Freudian Analysis
The Great Gatsby is one of the legendary novels written in the history of American literature. The novel intends to shed light on the failure of American dream that poor can attain whatever he wants and emphasizes on the hardships presented by the strong forces of social segregation. In order to understand this novel, there are various theories which tend to be helpful in order to understand various angles of this novel. Some of these theories are Freud's psychoanalytical theory, Marxist theory and Feminist theory. Each theory presents a different lens of looking at the same story and presents an ideology ruled by social factors and individual desires.
Paper Doctorate
Migration in the United Kingdom: Sociology, Policy, and Statistics
The history of humanity is also the history of migration, according to professor Harzig and colleagues. The original Homo sapiens migrated out of East Africa and spread slowly across the world (Harzig, 2009, 8).