Hist 301 Readings

HIST 301 Course Pack: Readings

GENERAL SOURCES

INTRODUCTION & OVERVIEW

Lecture 2: Barack Obama and the 2008 “Historic” Campaign

SECTION #1: THE REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN

Lecture 3: “Candidus”: The Traditional Campaign

  • The Federalist (Pps.40-44)
  • 1. Cato’s Letters, #13-14, 61-62 in Leonard W. Levy, ed., Cato’s Letters: Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious, 2 vols. (New York: De Capo Press, 1971), 1:82-88, 2:236-245.
  • Declaration of Independence

Lecture 4: “A Bundle of Compromises”: The Constitutional Campaign

  • 2. Rev. Ebenezer Baldwin, An Appendix, Stating the Heavy Grievances the Colonies Labour Under from Several Late Acts of the British Parliament… (New-Haven: T. and S. Green, 1774), pp. 9-14.
  • 3. The Constitution of the United States of America (especially Article II and Amendments 12, 13, 14, 15, 17, 19, 22, 24, 25, 26)
  • 4. The Federalist Papers, selections Nos. 49, 68 70, 71, 72 *(esp. #68)

Lecture 5: George Washington and Republican Virtue – SPOTLIGHT: 1788

Additional Primary Sources on Washington:

SECTION #2: THE PARTY CAMPAIGN

Lecture 6: The Emergence of Parties

Lecture 7: Andrew Jackson and the Partisan Campaign – SPOTLIGHT: 1828

SECTION #3: THE GOLDEN AGE OF PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGNING

Lecture 8: Confusion Reigns: 1840 and 1844 – SPOTLIGHT: 1840

Lecture 9: Golden Age of Partisan Campaigning: Participation – SPOTLIGHT: 1860

11. Primary Sources, 1868: Do Active Candidates Become Active Presidents?

Lecture 10: SPOTLIGHT 1876: Education and Partisanship

SECTION #4: 19th CENTURY CAMPAIGN TRANSFORMATIONS

Lecture 11: SPOTLIGHT 1896: The Battle of the Standards

Lecture 12: The Power of the Press: The Brave New World of Twentieth Century Politics

SECTION #5: THE VANISHING VOTER, 1900-2000

Lecture 13: FDR and the Rise of Mass Culture

SECTION #6: PERSONALITY AND PUBLICITY IN THE MODERN CAMPAIGN

Lecture 14: Richard Nixon and The Television Revolution: The Checkers Speech

SECTION #7: DID TELEVISION RUIN THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN?

SECTION #8: MAKING AND SELLING THE PRESIDENT, 1968, 1972

33. Are Voters Fools?

  • a. Arthur B. Maas “Foreword” to V.O. Key, Jr., The Responsible Electorate (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1966), pp. vii-xv.
  • b. Samuel L. Popkin, The Reasoning Voter: Communication and Persuasion in Presidential Campaigns (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1991), pp. 7-13. — Amazon.com Preview Pages
  • c. “Voters are Pack Rats,” Kathleen Hall Jamieson, Dirty Politics: Deception, Distraction and Democracy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992), pp. 17-23, 272-273, 278-279. — Amazon.com Preview Pages
  • d. “Trends in Trust in Government, 1958-1984,” Herbert B. Asher, Presidential Elections and American Politics: Voters, Candidates and Campaigns Since 1952, 4th ed.(Chicago: The Dorsey Press, 1988).
  • e. “Issue Voting,” from Crotty, pp. 50-53.
  • f. “What the Democrats and Republicans Stand for,” from Beck and Sorauf, pp. 436-437.
  • Gil Troy, “Money and Politics: the Oldest Connection,” Wilson Quarterly (Fall, 1997).

Lecture 22: George Bush wins in 2000 and 2004: what went wrong — and what went right and Right?

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