Sources for Western Society, Volume 2
Third EditionJohn P. McKay; Clare Haru Crowston; Merry E. Wiesner-Hanks; Joe Perry
©2014As a robust collection of primary sources to support content in History of Western Society, Sources for Western Society, Volume 2 provides you with the necessary tools to engage acutely with canonical and lesser-known sources, hearing from both prominent and ordinary voices to improve your understanding of history.
Table of Contents
Chapter 14: European Exploration and Conquest, 1450–1650 14-1: Columbus Sets the Context for His Voyage: CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS, Diario (1492) 14-2: Cortés Describes the Conquest of the Aztecs: HERNANDO CORTÉS, Two Letters to Charles V: On the Conquest of the Aztecs (1521) Sources in Conversation: The Slave Trade in Africa 14-3: ALVISE DA CA’ DA MOSTO, Description of Capo Bianco and the Islands Nearest to It: Fifteenth-Century Slave Trade in West Africa (1455–1456) 14-4: KING NZINGA MBEMBA AFFONSO OF CONGO, Letters on the Slave Trade (1526) 14-5: The Jesuits Bring Christianity to Asia: SAINT FRANCIS XAVIER, Missionaries in Japan (1552) 14-6: A Critique of European "Superiority": MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE, Of Cannibals (1580) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 15: Absolutism and Constitutionalism, ca. 1589–1725 15-1: A French King Establishes Limited Religious Toleration: HENRY IV, Edict of Nantes (1598) 15-2: An Argument for the Divine Right of Kings: JACQUES-BÉNIGNE BOSSUET, Politics Drawn from the Very Words of Holy Scripture (1679) 15-3: The English Place Limits on Monarchical Power: The Bill of Rights (1689) 15-4: A Tsar Imposes Western Styles on the Russians: PETER THE GREAT, Edicts and Decrees (1699–1723) Sources in Conversation: The Commonwealth and the State of Nature 15-5: THOMAS HOBBES, Leviathan (1651) 15-6: JOHN LOCKE, Second Treatise of Civil Government: Vindication for the Glorious Revolution (1690) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 16: Toward a New Worldview, 1540–1789 16-1: A New Model of the Solar System: NICOLAUS COPERNICUS, On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres (1542) 16-2: A Defense of Science: FRANCIS BACON, On Superstition and the Virtue of Science (1620) Sources in Conversation: Monarchical Power and Responsibility 16-3: FREDERICK THE GREAT, Essay on the Forms of Government (ca. 1740) 16-4: CHARLES DE SECONDAT, BARON DE MONTESQUIEU, From The Spirit of Laws: On the Separation of Governmental Powers (1748) 16-5: JEAN-JACQUES ROUSSEAU, The Social Contract: On Popular Sovereignty and the General Will (1762) 16-6: A Philosophe Argues for Religious Toleration: VOLTAIRE, A Treatise on Toleration (1763) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 17: The Expansion of Europe, 1650–1800 17-1: The Domestic Economy: The Guild System in Germany (1704–1719) 17-2: Defining and Defending Mercantilism: THOMAS MUN, England’s Treasure by Foreign Trade (1664) 17-3: Critiquing Mercantilism: ADAM SMITH, The Wealth of Nations (1776) Sources in Conversation: The Moral Implications of Expansion 17-4: OLAUDAH EQUIANO, A Description of the Middle Passage (1789) 17-5: ROBERT, FIRST BARON CLIVE, Speech in the House of Commons on India (1772) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 18: Life in the Era of Expansion, 1650–180018-1: The Dangers of Eighteenth-Century Life: EDMOND WILLIAMSON, Births and Deaths in an English Gentry Family (1709–1720) 18-2: Embracing Innovation in Medicine: MARY WORTLEY MONTAGU, On Smallpox Inoculations (ca. 1717) 18-3: Shaping Young Minds and Bodies: JOHN LOCKE, Some Thoughts Concerning Education (1693) Sources in Conversation: The Challenge to Established Religion in the 1700s 18-4: JOHN WESLEY, The Ground Rules for Methodism (1749) 18-5: THOMAS PAINE, The Age of Reason (1794) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 19: Revolutions in Politics, 1775–1815 19-1: The Third Estate Speaks: COMMISSIONERS OF THE THIRD ESTATE OF THE CARCASSONNE, Notebooks of Grievances (1789) 19-2: Redefining Society and the Nation: ABBÉ SIEYÈS, What Is the Third Estate? (1789) Sources in Conversation: Imagining a New France 19-3: NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF FRANCE, Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (1789) 19-4: The Law of 22 Prairial (1794) 19-5: NAPOLEON BONAPARTE, The Napoleonic Code (1804) 19-6: Challenging the Limits of Equality: MARY WOLLSTONECRAFT, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) 19-7: The Revolution in the French Colonies: FRANÇOIS DOMINIQUE TOUSSAINT L’OUVERTURE, A Black Revolutionary Leader in Haiti (1797) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 20: The Revolution in Energy and Industry, ca. 1780–1850 20-1: Predicting a Population Catastrophe: THOMAS MALTHUS, An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) Sources in Conversation: Life as an Industrial Worker at Mid-Century 20-2: FRIEDRICH ENGELS, The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 (1844) 20-3: Factory Rules in Berlin (1844) 20-4: NED LUDD, Yorkshire Textile Workers Threaten a Factory Owner (ca. 1811–1812) 20-5: Creating an Industrial Utopia: ROBERT OWEN, A New View of Society (1813) 20-6: Child Labor in an Industrial Age: The Child of the Factory (1842) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 21: Ideologies and Upheavals, 1815–1850 21-1: Arguing Against Higher Wages for Workers: DAVID RICARDO, On Wages (1817) Sources in Conversation: Conservatism, Liberalism, and Socialism21-2: KLEMENS VON METTERNICH, Political Confession of Faith (1820) 21-3: JOHN STUART MILL, On Liberty (1859) 21-4: KARL MARX AND FRIEDRICH ENGELS, The Communist Manifesto (1848) 21-5: Following Mademoiselle Liberté: EUGÈNE DELACROIX, Liberty Leading the People (1830) 21-6: Workers Demand the Vote: The People’s Charter (1838) 21-7 | The Misery of the Potato Famine: WILLIAM STEUART TRENCH, Realities of Irish Life (1847) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 22: Life in the Emerging Urban Society, 1840–1914 22-1: Sanitation and Public Health: SIR EDWIN CHADWICK, Inquiry into the Sanitary Conditions of the Poor (1842) 22-2: Life in London’s East End: JACK LONDON, The People of the Abyss (1902) Sources in Conversation: Separate Spheres 22-3: ISABELLA BEETON, Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management (1861) 22-4: Dressing the Respectable Woman (ca. 1890) 22-5: Women and the Industrial World: CLARA ZETKIN, Women’s Work and the Trade Unions (1887) 22-6: A New Creation Story: CHARLES DARWIN, The Descent of Man (1871) 22-7: Weeding Out the Weak: HERBERT SPENCER, Social Statics: Survival of the FittestApplied to Humankind (1851) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 23: The Age of Nationalism, 1850–1914 23-1: Romantic Nationalism in Italy: The First Meeting Between Mazzini and Garibaldi (1833) Sources in Conversation: Nationalism and the Conservative Order 23-2: GIORGIO ASPRONI, Reflections on the Death of Cavour (1860) 23-3: OTTO VON BISMARCK, Speech Before the Reichstag: On the Law for Workers’ Compensation (1884) 23-4: A Revolution in Paris: JOHN LEIGHTON, Paris Under the Commune (1871) 23-5: An Indictment of France’s Military Elite: ÉMILE ZOLA, "J’Accuse" the French Army (1898) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 24: The West and the World, 1815–1914 Sources in Conversation: Economic Imperialism and Military Expansion24-1: COMMISSIONER LIN ZEXU, Letter to Queen Victoria (1839) 24-2: JULES FERRY, Speech Before the French Chamber of Deputies (1884) 24-3 | British Conquests in Africa, The Rhodes Colossus (1892) 24-4 | A White Explorer in Black Africa: HENRY MORTON STANLEY, Autobiography (1909) 24-5 | An Anti-Imperialist Pamphlet: MARK TWAIN, King Leopold’s Soliloquy (1905) 39724-6 | Questioning the Economics of Imperialism: J. A. HOBSON, Imperialism (1902) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 25: War and Revolution, 1914–1919 25-1: Germany Gives Austria a Blank Check: CHANCELLOR THEOBALD VON BETHMANN-HOLLWEG, Telegram to the German Ambassador at Vienna (July 6, 1914) Sources in Conversation: World War I in the Trenches and in the Air 25-2: Klaxon Horn Used to Warn of Gas Attacks (1917) 25-3: Baron Manfred von Richthofen (1917) 25-4: Women and the War: HELENA SWANWICK, The War in Its Effect Upon Women (1916) 25-5: Preparing for the Coming Revolution: VLADIMIR I. LENIN, What Is to Be Done? (1902) 25-6: Making the World Safe for Democracy: WOODROW WILSON, The Fourteen Points (1918) 25-7: The Bitter Taste of Defeat: A Defeated Germany Contemplates the Peace Treaty (1919) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 26: The Age of Anxiety, 1880–1940 26-1: Discovering the Self: SIGMUND FREUD, The Interpretation of Dreams (1900) 26-2: A Female Impressionist’s Perspective, MARY CASSATT, Reading Le Figaro (1878) 26-3: An Analysis of the Versailles Treaty: JOHN MAYNARD KEYNES, The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1920) 26-4: Postwar Economic Crisis in Germany: Hyperinflation in Germany (1923) Sources in Conversation: The Great Depression in Great Britain and Germany 26-5: SIR PERCY MALCOLM STEWART, Parliament Addresses the Great Depression in Britain (1934) 26-6: HEINRICH HAUSER, With the Unemployed in Germany (1933) 26-7: German Communist Party Poster (1932) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 27: Dictatorships and the Second World War, 1919–1945 27-1: An American Admirer of Fascism: RICHARD WASHBURN CHILD, Foreword to the Autobiography of Benito Mussolini (1928) 27-2: A Culture of Paranoia and Coercion: VLADIMIR TCHERNAVIN, I Speak for the Silent (1930) Sources in Conversation: Propaganda and the Totalitarian State 27-3: ADOLF HITLER, Mein Kampf: The Art of Propaganda (1924) 27-4: Soviet Propaganda Posters (1941 and 1945) 27-5: Freedom’s Last Line of Defense: WINSTON CHURCHILL, Speech Before the Houseof Commons (June 18, 1940) 27-6: Legislating Racial Purity: The Nuremberg Laws: The Centerpiece of Nazi RacialLegislation (1935) 27-7: The First Steps Toward a "Final Solution": ALFRED ROSENBERG, The Jewish Question as a World Problem (1941) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 28: Cold War Conflict and Consensus, 1945–1965 28-1: The United States Rebuilds Europe: GEORGE C. MARSHALL, An American Plan to Rebuild a Shattered Europe (June 5, 1947) 28-2: The Stalinist Gulag: ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN, One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962) 28-3: Stalin Denounces Churchill: JOSEPH STALIN, Interview Regarding Winston Churchill’sIron Curtain Speech (March 14, 1946) Sources in Conversation: Challenging the Prewar Social and Political Order 28-4: FRANTZ FANON, The Wretched of the Earth (1961) 28-5: SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR, The Second Sex (1949) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 29: Challenging the Postwar Order,1960–1991 Sources in Conversation: Reforming Socialist Societies 29-1: SOLIDARITY UNION, Twenty-One Demands: A Call for Workers’ Rights and Freedoms (1980) 29-2: MIKHAIL GORBACHEV, Perestroika: A Soviet Leader Calls for Change (1987) 29-3: Tiananmen Square: Resistance to the Power of the State: JEFF WIDENER, Tank Man (1989) 29-4: Women Demand Fundamental Change: BETTY FRIEDAN, Statement of Purpose of theNational Organization for Women: Defining Full Equality (1966) 29-5: The Challenges of the Post-Communist Era: VACLAV HAVEL, New Year’s Address to the Nation (1990) Comparative and Discussion QuestionsChapter 30: Life in an Age of Globalization, 1990 to the Present Sources in Conversation: Islam Versus the West? 30-1: AMARTYA SEN, A World Not Neatly Divided (November 23, 2001) 30-2: TARIQ RAMADAN, Western Muslims and the Future of Islam (2004) 30-3: Protesting Globalization: A Greenpeace Activist at the G8 Summit (2001) 30-4: Arab Spring: A Tunisian Woman Casts Her Vote (2011) Comparative and Discussion Questions