Documenting United States History

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
our history. In general, visionary documents begin as mirrors; only time can tell
if they also serve as windows.

StepS 1–3


Steps 1 through 3 of the writing sequence have been outlined in earlier chapters,
which may be consulted for review.

Step 4 Outline your essay


Organizing this task requires an understanding of key documents and events and
a synthesis of the ideals that different eras represented. The following outline is a
possible beginning point for organization:

I. Introduction


II. Declaration of Independence


III. Gettysburg Address


IV. Period of 1890 to 1945


This chronology invites an understanding of the actual ideals of each era. Use your
historical thinking exercises in this chapter as a starting point. To review, these include
the closure of the American frontier (the Turner thesis) and the ambiguous prog-
ress made by women and minorities during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Integrating historical themes also allows you to contextualize your arguments even
further. When you consider the fulfillment of the ideals of the Declaration of Indepen-
dence and Gettysburg Address, you also consider which of the historical themes best
apply. Two that may apply are “identity” and “work, exchange, and technology.”
Thus, a revised outline for this prompt could incorporate these themes, mov-
ing away from the documents as the sole organizing agent. The outline below
allows you to create a framework for your essay that is organized around a few
themes and then to examine those themes through both mirror and window
lenses for each document. We have started the outline for you by filling in the
first main point (identity) for the first document.

I. Introduction


II. Declaration of Independence


A. THEME: IDENTITY. At issue in the struggle for equal rights from
the time of the founding through the twentieth century is the notion
of American IDENTITY—who we are as a nation and who is entitled
to the “natural rights” that are outlined in our founding documents.


  1. MIRROR: The Declaration reflects ideas of its time and sidesteps
    issues of rights for women and people of color. This relates to the
    theme IDENTITY, with women and people of color being less
    identifiable as Americans or citizens.


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