The writer who faded into obscurity in the nineteenth century but was recognized as one of America's greatest geniuses in the twentieth century was
a. Louisa May Alcott.
b. Henry David Thoreau.
c. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
d. Herman Melville.
e. Walt Whitman.
d
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What are the major themes of nineteenth-century European change discussed in this chapter?
a) increased urbanization, activist governments, rising personal mobility, and national self-awareness b) increasing authoritarianism, city de-population, disintegrating infrastructure, and increasing poverty Consider This: What do the struggles over control of the means of production and their associated demand for political power say about the nature of nineteenth-century developments? See 9.1: World Cities; 9.2: Individual Freedom and the Common Good; 9.3: Marx and Dialectic Materialism; and 9.4: Marxism Applied. c) agricultural innovation, rising levels of obesity, cultural stagnation, and class immobility Consider This: What do the struggles over control of the means of production and their associated demand for political power say about the nature of nineteenth-century developments? See 9.1: World Cities; 9.2: Individual Freedom and the Common Good; 9.3: Marx and Dialectic Materialism; and 9.4: Marxism Applied. d) universal suffrage, rapidly rising wages, large-scale development of suburbs, and transnational highway building Consider This: What do the struggles over control of the means of production and their associated demand for political power say about the nature of nineteenth-century developments? See 9.1: World Cities; 9.2: Individual Freedom and the Common Good; 9.3: Marx and Dialectic Materialism; and 9.4: Marxism Applied.
The Monroe Doctrine demanded
a. the sale of Florida to the United States. b. the independence of Canada. c. an end to European intervention in the Americas. d. both the sale of Florida to the United States and the independence of Canada.
The National Liberation Front in Vietnam was
a. a group of South Vietnamese nationalists and Communists who opposed the Diem government. b. an organization of pro-French colonialists who supported the return of French rule. c. a Christian missionary group dedicated to liberating Vietnam from Buddhism. d. an anti-Communist movement in North Vietnam. e. a women's rights organization.
In an attempt to control disloyalty and dissent in the North, Lincoln suspended Americans':
A) right to vote. B) writ of habeas corpus. C) protections against unwarranted search and seizure. D) protections against being tried twice for the same crime E) right of public assembly.