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Challenging the Myths of US History

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Beyond a takedown of the traditional narrative of US history, this sharp and accessible book teaches readers how to read history with a critical eye.According to textbooks, the media, and politicia...
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  • 23 September 2025
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Beyond a takedown of the traditional narrative of US history, this sharp and accessible book teaches readers how to read history with a critical eye.

According to textbooks, the media, and politicians of all stripes, the story of the United States is one of steady progress toward a "more perfect union." In this narrative, ideals of liberty and freedom explain the Revolution and the Civil War and drove racial progress. Similarly, foreign policy, if marked by stumbles, has been largely well-intentioned.

In seven pithy and provocative essays, historian Marc Egnal challenges this account. He argues that wealthy individuals who were set on economic and territorial expansion shaped the American narrative. The seven essays look at progress in the writing of history, the Revolution, the Civil War, violence, Vietnam, the women's movement, and the rise of Donald Trump. Egnal does not ignore protests and lofty ideals. Instead, he shows they were subordinate to the plans of the expansionists and to the racism that so often accompanied their designs. Accessible and engaging, Challenging the Myths of US History urges readers to question long-held assumptions and to look at the American past from a very different perspective.

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Price: $24.95
Pages: 240
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 23 September 2025
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780520402461
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

"Each of Egnal’s seven chapters radiates excitement about the work of reading, writing and arguing about American history." 

Marc Egnal is Professor of History Emeritus at York University, Toronto, and author of Clash of Extremes: The Economic Origins of the Civil War.
Contents
 
Preface: Getting Right with the Past
 
1. Is There Progress in the Study of US History?
2. Why the American Revolution?
3. What Caused the Civil War?
4. Homicidal Nation: Why Do Americans Kill Each Other So Often?
5. Why Did the United States Fight in Vietnam?
6. Do "Waves" Explain the Women's Movement?
7. Why Do So Many Americans Passionately Support Donald Trump?
Conclusion and Acknowledgments
 
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index