For the Record: From first contact through Reconstruction

For the Record: From First Contact Through Reconstruction by David E. Shi is a comprehensive primary source reader published by W.W. Norton in 1999. This first edition spans 653 pages and is presented in English. The book is designed for American history survey courses, offering a diverse array of documents that explore various themes and issues throughout U.S. history. The selections range from one to seven pages in length, allowing both students and instructors to engage deeply with the American experience through a variety of political, social, and cultural sources.
Readers will find that For the Record includes unique chapters that connect written documents to visual sources, enhancing the learning experience by teaching students how to interpret images alongside text. The collection features over three hundred primary sources, including eyewitness accounts and public documents, and is structured to facilitate connections across historical periods. Each chapter is accompanied by introductions, headnotes, noninterpretive footnotes, and review questions, making it a versatile resource for both classroom use and independent study.
Official synopsis Publisher
Assembled by a highly successful textbook author and an accomplished scholar and teacher, For the Record is a new and exciting two-volume primary source reader for American history survey courses. Variety and substance are the text’s defining qualities. Drawing on documents that range in length from one to seven pages, For the Record allows students and instructors to delve into the many themes and issues that make up our past. The selections are culled from a wealth of political, social, and cultural sources, and each reading provides students with diverse insights into the American experience. In addition, four unique chapters link the written word to the visual, teaching students how to interpret visual sources. While For the Record is ideally suited for use with the best-selling surveys America: A Narrative History and America: A Narrative History, Brief Edition, by George Brown Tindall and David F. Shi, its breadth and variety make this collection a successful stand-alone reader as well.
For the Record easily outdistances all other primary-source readers by * offering excerpts that range in length from one to seven pages and that are drawn from over three hundred primary sources;
* providing readings that draw on a rich variety of sources, including eyewitness accounts, public documents, and contemporary literature;
* using broad themes to help readers make Connections within and across historical periods;
* including introductions to each chapter as well as headnotes, noninterpretive footnotes, and review questions;
* encouraging students to interpret visual sources: colonial architecture, Mathew Brady’s unsparing photographs of the Civil War, images of urban poverty as captured by the Progressive reformer Jacob Riis, and propagandistic photographs from the Vietnam War.
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