Here are the rest of the threads of history I think I might use for my literature-based study of (loosely) 20th-century America next year. Recall that the first five are: (1) America as superpower, (2) Establishing current US borders and holdings, (3) African-American history and civil rights/equality in general, (4) changes to the American experience of childhood; and (5) economics.
Thread 6. Roots of the War on Terror. Post-WWII partition of the Middle East; Russians in Afghanistan; Iran hostage crisis; Reagan's strikes on Libya; Iran-Contra affair; US involvement in the Middle East; the first Gulf War; the first attack on the WTC; 9/11; wars in Afghanistan and Iraq; domestic civil liberties issues raised by the Patriot Act and the establishment of the DHS.
Thread 7. Party lines, scandal and hostility. Teapot dome scandal, big government vs. small government, pro- and anti-war stuff, Watergate, the "Reagan revolution," Iran-Contra, Bush v. Gore, "red states" and "blue states" as a cultural meme
Thread 8. American mobility. Increased use of the automobile; national roads; economic migrations (rural to urban, south to North, plains to West coast); migrants and immigrants; the interstate highway system; air travel.
Thread 9. Environmental movements. National parks and wilderness preserves, Rachel Carson, EPA, endangered species act, 1970s energy crisis, controversies over global cooling and warming, international treaties.
Thread 10. Mass communication/pop culture and computing. Radio, cinema, telephones, broadcast television, cable and satellite television with increased "channeling" of viewers, computers and the Internet, social media.
Thread 11. Selected Presidential biographies and in-depth look at the administrations. I argue that the bios and administrations of Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Ronald Reagan are the three most worthy of special attention.
With the exception of the Presidential biographies, all of these threads are chosen in an attempt to explain how we got where we are today. They are meant to be filaments from pre-WWI America to today's newspapers. Why is the US occupying the land that it does? Why do we find ourselves with China as the only other credible superpower? Why were so many people so excited about the election of the first African-American president? What does the current recession mean? Why do we have to take off our shoes in the airport? Why do people disagree about what to do about global warming? What are red states and blue states? What was it like before there was an Internet?