Walden University Antebellum Period US History Annotated Bibliography

Walden University Antebellum Period US History Annotated Bibliography

Walden University Antebellum Period US History Annotated Bibliography

Complete annotated bibliography for three sources. The attachment explains the instructions for the essay just use for reference when choosing a subject from the list provided.

An annotated bibliography includes descriptions and explanations of your listed sources beyond the basic citation information you usually provide in a standard bibliography page.

It is first a full citation of the work or source, followed by a brief discussion (big paragraph) that:

  • summarizes the information included in the source
  • describes how this information will support your essay topic or thesis
  • evaluates the source, pointing out possible strengths and weaknesses

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FORMATTING THE ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

For each of your three sources, you will create a citation (see example above for OpenStax) list that is alphabetical by author last name, just how you would list the sources on a standard bibliography page. Provide one space below the citation to begin the annotation – the summary and evaluation of the source.

 

UNFORMATTED ATTACHMENT PREVIEW

The Antebellum Period For your second essay you will analyze a major political trend, attitude, conflict, or event between 1812 and 1860 and explain its historical significance. Your analysis should answer in depth the question: Why is this particular idea or event important to the study of early U.S. history? This is a seemingly easy question to answer, but the goal is to uncover the details and nuances of whichever topic you choose in order to fully appreciate its value. Examples you might choose from (but are not limited to) include: • • • • • • • • • • • • • • the development of the Republican Party; Free Soil Movement; Free Labor Party; transportation revolution (or related projects); emergence of working class/middle class/wealthy business elites; Indian Removal policies; Nullification crisis; formation of Whig Party; Mexican