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Texas
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A01=Benjamin Heber Johnson
Abolition
Alamo
American Revolution
Austin
Author_Benjamin Heber Johnson
Barton Springs
Black Texans
Caddo
Category=NHK
Category=NHTB
Category=WQH
Comanche
Confederacy
constitution
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eq_history
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First Baptist Church
forthcoming
freedom
German Texas
Juneteenth
Kowa
Ku Klux Klan
lynching
Mexico
migration
Native American
New Deal
Paso del Norte
Populist Party
Prohibition
Sam Houston
slavery
Spanish missions
Stephen F. Austin
Tejanos
Tejas
Texans
Texas Rangers
Texas Revolution
Tonkawa
violence
white supremacy
Product details
- ISBN 9780300292190
- Dimensions: 140 x 203mm
- Publication Date: 14 Jul 2026
- Publisher: Yale University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
An exploration of the multifaceted characters and complex events that have defined the Lone Star State from its inception through today
When Americans turn on their laptops, play video games, go to church, vote, eat TexMex, shop for groceries, listen to music, grill steaks, or watch football, they are, knowingly or not, paying tribute to Texas. Tracing the profound and surprising story of the Lone Star State, Benjamin Heber Johnson shines new light on why Texas has had such a powerful influence on U.S. history.
Texas is known to outsiders for mob violence, swaggering self-conception, and conservative politics, but Johnson reveals that the state has also been on the forefront of taming frontier violence, establishing LGBTQ rights, and developing modern businesses such as organic food and personal computing. Neither looking away from the dark chapters of Texas history nor letting them overshadow the achievements of democracy and pluralism that are some of the state’s greatest legacies, Johnson offers a balanced and inclusive history of an often contentious and stereotyped region, covering such topics as the persistence of Native Americans, the frontier story of the Alamo, agrarian populism, racial segregation, the state’s porous border with Mexico, and the way historical memory continues to shape the state’s identity. The reality of Texas, Johnson shows us, is even bigger than we think it is.
When Americans turn on their laptops, play video games, go to church, vote, eat TexMex, shop for groceries, listen to music, grill steaks, or watch football, they are, knowingly or not, paying tribute to Texas. Tracing the profound and surprising story of the Lone Star State, Benjamin Heber Johnson shines new light on why Texas has had such a powerful influence on U.S. history.
Texas is known to outsiders for mob violence, swaggering self-conception, and conservative politics, but Johnson reveals that the state has also been on the forefront of taming frontier violence, establishing LGBTQ rights, and developing modern businesses such as organic food and personal computing. Neither looking away from the dark chapters of Texas history nor letting them overshadow the achievements of democracy and pluralism that are some of the state’s greatest legacies, Johnson offers a balanced and inclusive history of an often contentious and stereotyped region, covering such topics as the persistence of Native Americans, the frontier story of the Alamo, agrarian populism, racial segregation, the state’s porous border with Mexico, and the way historical memory continues to shape the state’s identity. The reality of Texas, Johnson shows us, is even bigger than we think it is.
Benjamin Heber Johnson is professor of history at Loyola University Chicago. Raised in Houston, TX, he is the author of numerous publications, including Revolution in Texas: How a Forgotten Rebellion and Its Bloody Suppression Turned Mexicans into Americans. Johnson lives in Chicago, IL.
Texas
€19.99
