American Life Change Between World War I and World War II
I provided two PDF’s documents one included the prompt and the question and the other include the rubric and also voice of freedom book. you must supply Chicago Style footnotes for every quote, statistic, and fact taken from the readings.
THE ANSWER DEPENDS ON THIS DOCUMENTS FROM VOICES OF FREEDOM BOOK:
- Document 126 – Woodrow Wilson, A World “Safe for Democracy” (1917)
- Document 127 – Randolph Bourne, “War is the Health of the State” (1918)
- Document 128 – A Critique of the Versailles Peace Conference (1919)
- Document 129 – Carrie Chapman Catt, Address to Congress Women’s Suffrage (1917)
- Document 130 – Eugene V. Debs, Speech to the Jury (1918)
- Document 131 – Rubie Bond, The Great Migration (1917)
- Document 118 – Manuel Gamio on a Mexican-Amerian Family and American Freedom (c. 1926)
- Document 133 – John A. Fitch on the Great Steel Strike (1919)
- Document 136 – The Fight for Civil Liberties (1921)
- Document 134 – Immigration Quotas Under the Johnson-Reed Act (1924)
- Document 138 – Congress Debates Immigration (1921)
- Document 140 – Alain Locke, The New Negro (1925)
- Document 141 – Elsie Hill and Florence Kelley Debate the Equal Rights Amendment (1922)
- Document 142 – Letter to Francis Perkins (1937)
- Document 143 – John Steinbeck, “The Harvest Gypsies” (1936)
- Document 144 – John L. Lewis on Labor’s Great Upheaval (1937)
- Document 145 – Franklin D. Roosevelt, “Great Security for the Average Man” (1934)
- Document 146 – Herbert Hoover on the New Deal and Liberty (1936)
- Document 148 – Frank H. Hill on the Indian New Deal (1935)
- Document 149 – W.E.B. DuBois, “A Negro Nation Within A Nation” (1935)
- Document 150 – Franklin Roosevelt on the Four Freedoms (1941)
- Document 151 – Will Durant, “Freedom of Worship” (1943)
- Document 152 – Henry R. Luce, “The American Century” (1941)
- Document 155 – World War II and Mexican-Americans (1945)
- Document 156 – Charles H. Wesley on African Americans and the Four Freedoms (1944)
- Document 157 – Justice Robert A. Jackson, Dissent in Korematsu v. United States (1944)








Jermaine Byrant
Nicole Johnson



