Acknowledgments
Part I: Introduction
1 Twelve Propositions for a History of U.S. Cultural History
James W. Cook and Lawrence B. Glickman
Part II: Practicing Cultural History
Introduction by Michael O’Malley
2 A Native among the Headhunters
Ann Fabian
3 Rags, Blacking, and Paper Soldiers: Money and Race in the Civil War
Michael O’Malley
4 The Envelope, Please
Shane White, Stephen Garton, Stephen Robertson, and Graham White
5 Re-membering John Dillinger
Elliott J. Gorn
6 Behind Shirley Temple’s Smile: Children, Emotional Labor, and the Great Depression
John F. Kasson
7 Gimme Shelter: Do-It-Yourself Defense and the Politics of Fear
Elaine Tyler May
8 “Be Real Black for Me”: Representation, Authenticity, and the Cultural Politics of Black Power
Waldo E. Martin Jr.
9 Turning Structure into Culture: Reclaiming the Freeway in San Diego’s Chicano Park
Eric Avila
Part III: Agendas for Cultural History
Introduction by Michael O’Malley
10 The Return of the Culture Industry
James W. Cook
11 On Grief and Complicity: Notes toward a Visionary Cultural History
Nan Enstad
12 From Nation to Neighborhood: Land, Policy, Culture, Colonialism, and Empire in U.S.-Indian Relations
Philip J. Deloria
13 Capitalism, Culture, and Catastrophe
Jean-Christophe Agnew
Part IV: Epilogue
14 The Art of Listening
Karen Halttunen
Notes on Contributors
Index