Documenting United States History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

402 ChApTEr 17 | ChaLLenGes to the statUs QUo | period seven 1890 –1945


exercise on comparison, appropriate use of evidence, and contextualization, the
international context clearly influences the American perception of the Commu-
nist Party. Although working people joined social and economic movements in
the early 1900s, the end of World War I signaled the end of isolationism for the
United States and opened the doors to ideologies that threatened the economic
fabric.
Socialism and communism shared some similar economic concerns, but they
differed because of historical events that reshaped America’s role in the world.
Consider the following prompt:

Compare the above excerpts from Zora Neale Hurston (Doc. 17.6) and
F. Scott Fitzgerald (Doc. 17.5). In what ways do both express notions that
are at odds with the American status quo of this period?

Using literature as a primary document automatically contextualizes a historical
discussion because authors are influenced by the context in which they write and
their work archives the era.
In the documents referred to in the above prompt, for example, Fitzgerald’s
vision of the endless pursuit of wealth seems as romanticized as Hurston’s tribute
to her race. Both voices seek to paint a picture of America that is distant from its
reality, and both paint a picture that is prettier than reality. Why?
Preparing an answer to such a question allows you to evaluate key contexts
or perspectives. Which ones most prominently influenced these writers? First,
consider the contexts that apply:


Social


Economic


Demographic

Next, evaluate the most (or least) important contexts, or determine if they
carry equal weight in their influence. When you make these evaluative state-
ments, use transitional words that show judgment, such as the following:

Even more important
Less significant
To an equal extent
Most important
Far less noteworthy

Finally, your outline requires you to compare two documents that accomplish
the same goal, so you have the freedom to evaluate the contexts differently. For
example, matters of race (a social context) and class (an economic context) may
figure differently in each author’s vision. A sample outline is provided below:

putting it all together 403

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