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Bøger af Randolph B. Campbell

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  • - Harrison County, Texas, 1850-1880
    af Randolph B. Campbell
    508,95 kr.

  • - The Home Front
    af Randolph B. Campbell
    568,95 kr.

    Offers an informative look at the challenges and changes faced by Texans on the home front during the Second World War. This collection of essays by leading scholars of Texas history covers topics from the African American and Tejano experience to organized labour, from the expanding opportunities for women to the importance of oil and agriculture.

  • af Randolph B. Campbell
    538,95 kr.

    Although many historians have studied Reconstruction, few have sought to determine how the turbulent era after the Civil War was played out on a local level. In this groundbreaking work, Randolph Campbell examines six Texas counties during that period, revealing a diversity of experience that challenges popular generalizations.

  • - The Peculiar Institution in Texas, 1821-1865
    af Randolph B. Campbell
    278,95 kr.

    Examines slavery in the antebellum South's newest state and reveals how significant slavery was to the history of Texas. The "peculiar institution" was perhaps the most important factor in determining the economic development and ideological orientation of the state in the years leading to the Civil War.

  • af Randolph B. Campbell & Richard G. Lowe
    298,95 kr.

    Americans have long lived with an optimistic view of their society, what might be termed the "egalitarian idea." The antebellum South, with its peculiar institution of Negro slavery, has stood in general as the most likely exception to this ideal, though the "planter vs. plain folk" debate has engaged generations of scholars. How closely did the South approximate the "egalitarian ideal"? And how did the South compare with the rest of the nation in terms of economic and political arrangements? Wealth and Power in Antebellum Texas investigates these questions for a relatively young and rapidly developing part of the slave South. Relying on quantitative evidence gathered from census records as well as on traditional historical materials, the authors examine all measures of the "egalitarian ideal" in the Lone Star state. Their close analysis of wealthholding, the interplay of economic and political relationships, and the direction and degree of change from 1850 to 1860 reveals a high and stable level of inequality in the distribution of wealth, a high concentration of wealthholding in Texas towns, and clear indication that those who held the greatest share of wealth also held the balance of political power. Where possible, comparisons have been made with other areas of the United States. Surprisingly, wealth in Texas before the Civil War was no more unequally distributed than it was elsewhere in the country, both North and South, during the same period. The "egalitarian ideal" may have been largely mythical in antebellum Texas, but it seems to have been equally mythical in the nation as a whole.

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