Alan Trachtenberg's Incorporation Of America

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Alan Trachtenberg’s theme of Incorporation of America is to study the “effects of the corporate system on culture, on values and outlooks, on the way of life” By “the incorporation of America”, he means, “the emergence of a change, more tightly structured society with new hierarchies of control, and also changed conceptions of the society, of America itself.” He contends that America experienced cultural and social changes due to the growth of industrialization and urbanization following the Civil War, arguing that corporations were the dominated reason for social change. Trachtenberg describes in his preface the purpose of each chapter, to provide “the social history of the era, and shows the power of images as concepts, of myths as ideology, the encompassing image and myth being that of America itself: a symbol in contention.” For example, in chapter one he analyzes historian Frederick Jackson Turner “frontier thesis,” as he describes Western expansion. During the Homestead Act discussion, Trachtenberg asserts “Rather than fostering a region of family farmers, the …show more content…

Munn v. Illinois (1877), is one of six cases, known as Granger cases that the Court decided along the same lines. Chief Justice Waite argued that the states may regulate the use of private property "when such regulation becomes necessary for the public good." In the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company v. Illinois case (1886), the Court ruled that states did not have the right to control interstate commerce that right belongs to the Congress. Justice Samuel Miller adds: “the power of Congress to make such reasonable regulations as the interests of interstate commerce may demand, without denuding the States of their just powers over their own roads and their own corporations.” In 1877, Congress created the Interstate Commerce Commission charged with regulating and monitoring interstate

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