All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Religious Toleration in Colonial America

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Learn the key elements of a broadened approach to the study of history with this fast-moving examination of the origins of religious and racial tolerance in America. Grasp how the assumptions you’ve long held can differ dramatically from historical reality.

  • S01E02 Neither American nor Revollutionary?

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Continue this new approach to understanding history with a look at efforts of the colonists to defend their “rights as Englishmen” and the ironic role played by European tyrannies in helping establish the nation that would forever change the definition of liberty.

  • S01E03 The Constitution Did Not Create a Democracy

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Gain a nuanced understanding of what the Founders’ “original intent” really was and how so many of the questions they grappled with divided them for their entire lives—ultimately being bequeathed to their successors and persisting even to this day.

  • S01E04 Washington - Failures and Real Accomplishments

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Set aside the hagiography that helped shape George Washington’s image and undertake a balanced examination that measures his military and presidential failings against his numerous successes. See how some of the least known of those successes may have been his most important contributions to American history.

  • S01E05 Confusion about Jefferson and Hamilton

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Jefferson and Hamilton held sharply differing views on policy and constitutional interpretation. Learn how their conflict—often thought of in terms of our contemporary understanding of liberalism and conservatism - is actually relevant to us in very different ways from those we imagine.

  • S01E06 Andrew Jackson - An Odd Symbol of Democracy

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Andrew Jackson’s election ushered in an era marked by much democratic reform. Ironically, as you’ll learn, the man who would be seen as the symbol of such reform actually opposed much of it and championed many policies that few today would call democratic.

  • S01E07 The Second Great Awakening - Enduring Impacts

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Grasp how the links between religion and politics that today inspire such powerful positive and negative emotions are nothing new. See how issues born out of the 19th-century’s evangelical upheaval—from prison reform to women’s suffrage—still engage us today.

  • S01E08 Did Slavery Really Cause the Civil War?

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    By analyzing this question and the different answers posed by generations of historians, you begin to understand “historiography”—the study of the writing of history—and take a key step in your understanding of history itself.

  • S01E09 The Civil War's Actual Turning Points

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Discover how perceptions of Gettysburg as the Civil War’s “turning point” are inaccurate. Here, examine three battles that were arguably more important and gain new insights into what determines—in any war—how meaningful a battle really was.

  • S01E10 The Myth of Laissez-Faire

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    The great age of post–Civil War industrialization and the enormous levels of national and personal wealth it generated (for some) have often been attributed to a governmental attitude of “hands-off” toward business. Discover that such an attitude did not exist in the United States and that, in fact, it never had.

  • S01E11 Misconceptions about the Original Populists

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Is a reference to someone as a “populist” praise or criticism? Does it have any reference to where a person stands on the political spectrum? This lecture analyzes the nation’s original populist movement and what links—if any—it has to contemporary namesakes.

  • S01E12 Labor in America - A Strange History

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Although often seen as a dramatic reversal of historical government support for labor, today’s efforts to scale back collective bargaining rights are actually a reassertion of policy with a long precedent. Learn that the pro-union policies of the New Deal represent the real break with the past.

  • S01E13 Myths about American Isolation and Empire

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Was the United States ever as isolationist and opposed to imperialism as is commonly believed? Explore the myth and reality surrounding our historical self-image and learn how America’s expansionist history might appear from the perspectives of other nations.

  • S01E14 Early Progressives Were Not Liberals

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Many liberals see the roots of their philosophy in progressivism, but this is misleading. Learn how progressivism also included many ideas—such as eugenics, limits on free speech, and restrictions on immigration—that would have outraged modern liberals.

  • S01E15 Woodrow Wilson and the Rating of Presidents

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    How, exactly, should past presidents be judged? A provocative examination of Woodrow Wilson’s presidency—judged a great success by some and a profound failure by others—provides an opportunity to explore the broader issues of presidential ratings in general.

  • S01E16 The Roaring Twenties Reconsidered

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Were the 1920s really a return to isolationism and the values of the late 19th century? Uncover a decade far more complex than is generally believed, as you learn how much of the change begun during the progressive era continued—in many ways setting the stage for contemporary America.

  • S01E17 Hoover and the Great Depression Revisited

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Herbert Hoover came to the White House regarded as both a skilled manager and great humanitarian, yet left the presidency perceived as just the opposite. Gain an understanding of how this could happen through a detailed examination of both his forgotten accomplishments and his often misunderstood failures.

  • S01E18 What Did Roosevelt's New Deal Really Do?

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    FDR was simultaneously one of the most beloved and most hated of U.S. presidents. Explore what the New Deal attempted and accomplished—as well as its intended and unintended consequences—as you grasp its role in creating the economic and political systems of today’s America.

  • S01E19 World War II Misconceptions and Myths

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Is our understanding of “the Good War” correct? Grasp how our reliance on a national mythology makes for not only inaccurate history but a misconceived future because of the long-term effects that myths about the war have had on American policy since 1945.

  • S01E20 Was the Cold War Inevitable?

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Professor Stoler holds that the cold war was not necessarily destined to happen. In this lecture, he leads you in an analysis of why it took place and lasted so long, with examination along the way of several additional myths regarding this long and dangerous Soviet-American conflict.

  • S01E21 The Real Blunders of the Vietnam War

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Why did America fail in Vietnam? Was it flawed military strategy? Political micromanagement? America’s domestic antiwar movement? You not only learn the answer to this fundamental question, but you also gain a more nuanced understanding of why the debate has raged to this day.

  • S01E22 Myths about American Wars

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Vietnam is far from America's only misunderstood war. This lecture delves into the common myths and misunderstandings shared by many Americans about why the nation's wars have been fought and how the results have been judged.

  • S01E23 What Matters in American History?

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Who in history do we choose to remember, and why? Take in the extraordinary accomplishments of several Americans—including John Adams, John Quincy Adams, and George C. Marshall—whose achievements and influence may well have exceeded those of many of the great figures more vividly remembered.

  • S01E24 History Did Not Begin with Us

    • July 8, 2013
    • The Great Courses

    Conclude the course with an appreciation that history did not begin with the events of our own lifetime. Explore the antecedents of the civil rights, antiwar, and women’s rights movements and the tendency to pronounce any era’s major technological advances as the most important in history