Category: History 3303

  • The Stamp Act Resolutions and the Declaratory Act

    During the second half of the eighteenth century, the tensions between American colonists and the British government intensified because the Parliament did not want to delegate some of its authorities to the local people who believed that they had been excluded from the political life. Overall, the nature of this conflict can be better explained…

  • American Consensus in the 50s and 60s

    Table of Contents Introduction American Consensus in 1945-1963 American Consensus after 1963 Conclusion Bibliography Introduction The unity of the people is a fundamental factor for the productive and prosperous existence of any state. The idea of unification is especially essential for such a multi-ethnic and multicultural country like the US. The first significant measures to…

  • The Senkaku Islands Territorial Disputes

    Table of Contents Introduction The Senkaku Islands conflict Analysis of the Conflict Position of China The position of the Japanese The situation as it is today What can be done in future? Conclusion Works Cited Introduction The current state of relationship between Japan and China is largely due to their conflict with regards to control…

  • The Fire Next Time a Book by James Baldwin

    Table of Contents Introduction Analysis: Race Relations in Early 1960s America Conclusion Works Cited Introduction The Fire Next Time is a book written by James Baldwin. It is a collection of two essays Down at The Cross: Letter from a Region of My Mind and My Dungeon Shook: Letter to my Nephew on the One…

  • The U.S. Key Documents: Comparative Analysis

    Table of Contents Introduction Articles of Confederation U.S. Constitution Conclusion Works Cited Introduction For many modern states, including the USA, studies of the historical course of formation of federative relations are of unique scientific value. The U.S. path to independence was not straightforward: British colonies were able to win the right to self-government only during…

  • Modern History of the Gulf

    The Gulf consists of two large countries: Iran and Iraq, and the smaller gulf monarchs that make up the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC); they are Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia, Oman, Bahrain, and Qatar. Venezuela is also part of the Gulf countries. Instability in the Gulf region became apparent in the last…

  • Transformations Taking Place in the Montenegrin Society

    The tradition of dividing Europe into several regions has been existing for centuries. Such zoning has always demonstrated rather eloquently the hierarchy taking place between the countries and their alliances and has been politically and culturally loaded. The existing tendencies have already been reflected and contested in the scientific literature to some extent: for example,…

  • The Bombing of Japan

    Norton, Mary, Carol Sheriff, David Blight, and David Katzman, the authors of the book A People and a Nation shed light upon the most significant facts and figures, representing the events of the summer of 1945. The purpose of this paper is to compare and contrast the representation of the historical events of bombing the…

  • Young American Males and Filibustering in the Age of Manifest Destiny by Robert May

    The author, May has tried to convince his readers about the effects filibustering had on the American citizens. In his article Young American males and filibustering in the age of Manifest Destiny: the United States Army as a cultural mirror in The Journal of American History, published in 1991, May has tried to show up…

  • A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies by Bartolome de las Casas

    A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies is a book written by the Spanish Dominican friar, Bartolomé de las Casas, in 1542. The short account describes the events that occurred in the Indies in the fifteenth century. It is about the mistreatment of Native Americans in colonial times which were sent to the…