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Texas Roots

Texas Roots
Author: C. Allan Jones
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 266
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 1603446028

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The uniquely Texan system that arose from the state's agricultural heritage, a mixture of practices and traditions from New Spain, Mexico, Europe, and the South, was the foundation for Texas' economic strength after the Civil War. In "Texas Roots," Jones brings alive this aspect of the state's history that contributed immeasurably to its identity and prosperity.


The Roots of Texas Music

The Roots of Texas Music
Author: Lawrence Clayton
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 252
Release: 2005-09-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781585444922

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The music of Texas and the American Southwest is as diverse and distinctive as the many different groups who have lived in the region over the past several centuries,” writes Gary Hartman in his introduction to this refreshingly different look at various genres of Texas music. Roots of Texas Music celebrates the diverse sources of the music of the Lone Star State by gathering chapters by specialists on each of them—specialists whose views may not have dominated the perception of Texas music to date. Editor Lawrence Clayton conceived this project as one that would not simply repeat the common wisdom about Texas music traditions, but rather would offer new perspectives. He therefore called on contributors whose work had been well-grounded but not necessarily widely published. The result is a lively, captivating, and original look at the musical traditions of Texas Germans and Czechs, black Creoles and Chicanos, and blues and gospel singers. Hartman’s introduction places these repertoires within the larger picture of one of the most fertile musical seedbeds the nation knows. The diverse genres included in the anthology also provide an introduction to the classes, cultures, races, and ethnic groups of Texas and highlight the ways in which the state’s musical wealth has influenced the listening habits of the nation.


The Texas Right

The Texas Right
Author: David O'Donald Cullen
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 259
Release: 2014-02-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1623491118

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In The Texas Right: The Radical Roots of Lone Star Conservatism, some of our most accomplished and readable historians push the origins of present-day Texas conservatism back to the decade preceding the twentieth century. They illuminate the initial factors that began moving Texas to the far right, even before the arrival of the New Deal. By demonstrating that Texas politics foreshadowed the partisan realignment of the erstwhile Solid South, the studies in this book challenge the traditional narrative that emphasizes the right-wing critique of modern America voiced by, among others, radical conservatives of the state’s Democratic Party, beginning in the 1930s. As the contributors show, it is impossible to understand the Jeffersonian Democrats of 1936, the Texas Regular movement of 1944, the Dixiecrat Party of 1948, the Shivercrats of the 1950s, state members of the John Birch Society, Texas members of Young Americans for Freedom, Reagan Democrats, and most recently, even, the Tea Party movement without first understanding the underlying impulses that produced their formation.


Toward a Cooperative Commonwealth

Toward a Cooperative Commonwealth
Author: Thomas Alter
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 462
Release: 2022-04-12
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0252053273

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Agrarian radicalism's challenge to capitalism played a central role in working-class ideology while making third parties and protest movements a potent force in politics. Thomas Alter II follows three generations of German immigrants in Texas to examine the evolution of agrarian radicalism and the American and transnational ideas that influenced it. Otto Meitzen left Prussia for Texas in the wake of the failed 1848 Revolution. His son and grandson took part in decades-long activism with organizations from the Greenback Labor Party and the Grange to the Populist movement and Texas Socialist Party. As Alter tells their stories, he analyzes the southern wing of the era's farmer-labor bloc and the parallel history of African American political struggle in Texas. Alliances with Mexican revolutionaries, Irish militants, and others shaped an international legacy of working-class radicalism that moved U.S. politics to the left. That legacy, in turn, pushed forward economic reform during the Progressive and New Deal eras. A rare look at the German roots of radicalism in Texas, Toward a Cooperative Commonwealth illuminates the labor movements and populist ideas that changed the nation’s course at a pivotal time in its history.


Trails to Texas

Trails to Texas
Author: Terry G. Jordan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 246
Release: 1981
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

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A look at the development of open-range cattle ranching which dominated the Great Plains and proliferated in Texas during the end of the nineteenth century.


Red Dirt

Red Dirt
Author: Josh Crutchmer
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2020-09-19
Genre:
ISBN: 9780578694252

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The Roots of Texas Music

The Roots of Texas Music
Author: Lawrence Clayton
Publisher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 249
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 1603445757

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Contains nine essays in which the authors examine various aspects of Texas music from its beginnings to 1950, providing an overview of Texas music history, and discussing Texan jazz, country music, early Texas bluesmen, classical and religious music, and various ethnic genres.


Texas Roots (Large Print Edition)

Texas Roots (Large Print Edition)
Author: Jean Brashear
Publisher:
Total Pages: 410
Release: 2018-09-25
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9781942653592

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Whatever had possessed her mother to tell her they had no family?


Made In Texas

Made In Texas
Author: Michael Lind
Publisher:
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2009-04-28
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0786728299

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Everyone knows that President George W. Bush is from Texas. But few of us know the role his home state plays in his presidency, and in our country. In this dual biography of man and state, Michael Lind confronts the chief crises of Bush's presidency--the economy, the Middle East, and religious fundamentalism--and traces their roots back to Texas, a state, Lind argues, that yields salient clues to the future course of our country.Widely praised as an iconoclastic and brilliant political observer, Lind, a fifth generation Texan, chronicles the ethnic clash that produced modern Texas, the well-known plundering of the state's natural resources at the hands of its elites, and finally the deep strain of "Old Testament religiosity" which, having originated in Texas, now reaches all over the globe in the form of Bush's foreign policy.In the tradition of Gary Wills's Reagan's America, Made in Texas provides a wholly original cultural history that should change the way we understand not just our president, but our country.