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Nation of Nations 3/e Davidson, Gienapp, Heyrman, Lytle, and Stoff | |
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Chapter 27: America's Rise to Globalism (Nation 3/e)
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
When you have finished studying this chapter, you should be able to:
- Explain why the United States was unable to remain isolated from the German, Italian and Japanese aggression in the 1930s.
- Understand the long-term lessons Americans brought away from the policy of isolation that led to appeasement at Munich and the attack on Pearl Harbor.
- Explain how the Allies' grasp of global military, diplomatic, and economy strategy led to victory.
- Discuss and evaluate the praise and criticism Franklin Roosevelt received for his leadership during World War II.
- Explain how war work affected the lives of ordinary Americans, especially women.
- Discuss the experiences and responses of minorities during the war.
- Discuss key issues of domestic politics during the war, especially those involving labor, taxes, New Deal reforms, and Roosevelt's reelection to a fourth term.
- Describe how the end of the war forced Americans to confront the Holocaust, the atomic bomb, and deteriorating Soviet-American relations.
Copyright ©1998 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.



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