• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

I want to learn more about US history, where to start?

Status
Not open for further replies.

BSsBrolly

Banned
Just watched Lincoln and it made me want to learn more about the history of the US. Now I'm not ignorant or anything, I'd just like to learn more.

Any book recommendations?
 
Lies_my_teacher_told_me.jpg

http://www.amazon.com/dp/0743296281/?tag=neogaf0e-20
 
Watch Ken Burns' The Civil War.
It's the best way to get educated on the most important chapter of American history.

The excellent People's History of the United States provides an alternative narrative to the American story (and pretty much mandatory if you want to fuck counter culture chicks) but you might want to approach it after you're a but more familiar with the mainstream telling of that story (you can definitely tackle it, it's a very easy read, it's just that you're bound to raise some eyebrows if that's the only telling that you know).
 
braveheart --> Last of the Mohicans --> the patriot --> Saving Private Ryan --> Band of Brothers --> we were soldiers --> lethal weapon --> the postman --> mad max --> waterworld

let's keep it going

I kind of ruined your American History as Told By Mel Gibson thing, sorry. Still, I think you have to have a WW2 film in there.

edit: put last of the mohicans in the wrong place
 
I kind of ruined your American History as Told By Mel Gibson thing, sorry. Still, I think you have to have a WW2 film in there.

edit: put last of the mohicans in the wrong place

valid point and no worries it sits in the list fine. i'm trying to figure out what's after waterworld. battlefield earth?
 
The two must read books of American history are

Empire of Liberty (1789-1815), Gordon Wood.
Rise of American Democracy (1815-1860), Sean Wilentz.

Both are fine stand-alone, synthetic treatments of their eras- coffee table books, in effect. They are long, and with lots of material, but they are explicitly designed as introductions for non-specialists, but are subtle and important enough that they are go-to references for professionals in the field.


More specific monographs
Aggressive Nationalism- Richard Ellis. Constitutional conflict in early 1800s America
Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men- Eric Foner- the antebellum political era and its conflicts.
Constitution Besieged- Howard Gillman- evolution of political thought from 1880s to 1920s

And, since you just saw Lincoln- from another thread

Read James Oakes's The Radical and the Republican; a subtle, challenging, but sympathetic account of Lincoln [and Frederick Douglass] with a particular focus on his involvement with party politics [what this film is mostly about]. This is the book I'm recommending to everyone interested in this film [and not just because the historian who wrote it is a great guy with whom I studied.]

I'd also second Tocqueville, but only AFTER you read the first two books on the list. 1871 is right that it's not the best starting point, but it's the best book on America. However, it requires the historical background that Wood and Wilentz will give you.

EDIT:
It's fun and edgy to post Zinn, Lies My Teacher Taught Me, etc., but the professional historians are all shying away from those sorts of works now and returning to something closer to orthodox history. I can tell you that all of the serious work we read in my history PhD program was far closer to old-school history- you know, the "Lies My Teacher Taught Me"- than anything out of Zinn and friends. And none of my history professors were anything close to Republicans, for the record. Foner himself is a raving Marxist in his personal politics but his historical accounts are quite "conservative", historiographically speaking.
 
apocalypto --> braveheart --> the patriot --> Saving Private Ryan --> Band of Brothers --> we were soldiers --> lethal weapon --> the postman --> mad max --> waterworld

let's keep it going

Gotta have some stuff from before the colonies were set up for context in there.
 
braveheart --> the patriot --> Saving Private Ryan --> Band of Brothers --> we were soldiers --> lethal weapon --> the postman --> mad max --> waterworld

let's keep it going

Braveheart-->The Patriot-->Lincoln-->Saving Private Ryan-->Band of Brothers-->M*A*S*H-->We Were Soldiers-->Lethal Weapon-->2012-->The Postman-->Mad Max-->Waterworld
 
I'm actually learning a lot about US history and the US's relations to Europe in the 1800s from a great biography of Samuel Morse. Its really interesting reading about the events through the lense of the collected letters and papers of one person, and what they found important.
 
Assuming nothing is off-limits, I can't recommend Ken Burns' documentaries enough.

I just started (well, i'm 6 hours in) watching Ken Burns' The Roosevelts. I've never watched a Burns documentary... this is sooooooooo good. I'm actually glad that it's exceptionally long and detailed.

I want a freakin' movie of Theodore's amazonian adventure
 
You should pick up some of David McCullough's books. 1776, Truman, and John Adams are all considered masterpieces.

John Milton Cooper and H.W Brands wrote excellent biographies on Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt as well.

Ronald Reagan's autobiography is wonderful.

Bill O'Reilly's "Killing" books are really, really good and they don't really have much of any party politics. They were loved and recommended to me by a Democrat.

Haha, no.

Uh, yes.
 
The Men Who Built America (also known as The Innovators: The Men Who Built America in some international markets) is a History six-hour, four-part miniseries docudrama broadcast in Fall (Autumn) 2012, and on the History Channel UK in Spring 2013. The series focuses on Cornelius Vanderbilt, John D. Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie, J. P. Morgan and Henry Ford and how their industrial innovations and business empires revolutionized modern society

Z96oXaP.png
 
Braveheart-->The Patriot-->Lincoln-->Saving Private Ryan-->Band of Brothers-->M*A*S*H-->We Were Soldiers-->Lethal Weapon-->2012-->The Postman-->Mad Max-->Waterworld

Braveheart-->The Patriot-->Lincoln-->Saving Private Ryan-->Band of Brothers-->The Pacific-->M*A*S*H-->We Were Soldiers-->Lethal Weapon-->Blackhawk Down-->2012-->The Postman-->Mad Max-->Waterworld
 
I want to chime in with a suggestion that you listen to Dan Carlin's Hardcore History.

"The American Peril" is an excellent examination of what was going on in America around the turn of the last century. This episode goes a long way towards making the next 114 years make sense with regards to our foreign policy. It's one of my favorite standalone episodes.

Ken Burns The West
Ken Burns The Civil War
 
Lately, I've really start to get into history myself. I realize its one of the few things that I feel woefully uninformed about. One idea I've read somewhere (but I don't remember where) is to just find the highest rated, most well received biography of each president, and read each one. Obviously, that's a long term project, but it's something I've thought about starting on sometime. I'm definitely going to follow this thread, though. I need to learn more and I know GAF has some pretty competent history buffs.
 
A People's History of the United States was kind of a mindscrew for me.
There is so much untold (both intentionally and inadvertently) in American History. Definitely an interesting and eye-opening perspective on well-known and not-so-well-known events.
 
I just started (well, i'm 6 hours in) watching Ken Burns' The Roosevelts. I've never watched a Burns documentary... this is sooooooooo good. I'm actually glad that it's exceptionally long and detailed.

I want a freakin' movie of Theodore's amazonian adventure

Definitely check out Civil War, it's his masterpiece. We could watch together if you want? Maybe charge our JO crystals while listening to the soothing tones of Shelby Foote.
 
There are people recommending A People's History of the United States? Howard Zinn was a well documented Communist when the Cold War was at its height in the late 50s and early 60s. The FBI released files in 2010 that make it known without any doubt whatsoever.

Zinn writes well and is quite inspiring, but his book is bad history. In fact, I would not even call it history. A People's History of the United States is a political tract that uses the past to promote a presentist agenda...Zinn's book violates virtually every rule of good historical thinking.[
-John Fea, Author / Historian


From the beginning, critics have pointed out the lack of context, sourcing and footnoting, and objectivity in Zinn's work. The author countered that his aim was not objective history, but prescriptive history—not studying the past as a means of understanding the past, but of changing the future.

When changing the future, one can't start too young. The Zinn Education Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to "Teaching A People's History" maintains a website of educational resources for getting Zinn's ideas into elementary and even preschool classrooms. A Young People's History of the United States is already available; next up is the comic-book version. The story always begins with friendly Indians paddling blithely into the clutches of European imperialists. [4]

-http://www.worldmag.com/articles/16402

You might enjoy this book if your a communist, but I'll stick to more objective books about history which highlight the faults of American history, as well as the successes. The lack of objectivity is not just a claim, Zinn fully admitted it.

"Objectivity is impossible, and it is also undesirable"
-Howard Zinn


I just can't fathom how anyone could recommend his book unless they are so totally far left that they can completely see past his revisionism.
 
All history is told from a perspective. Him being a communist at the height of the cold war makes the book more interesting not less.
 
All history is told from a perspective. Him being a communist at the height of the cold war makes the book more interesting not less.

There is a difference between writing with a perspective and writing with an agenda.

I would suggest, say, Churchill has a perspective. Zinn has an agenda.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom