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Lodged between the
jammed pack Civil War and reconstruction era and the booming Progressive Era of
the early 20th century, the Gilded Age lends itself to critiques as
a time where the nation was littered with fraud, corruption and rotten to the
core. The term “Gilded Age” was coined from the title of the novel published by
Charles Dudley Warner and Mark Twain in 1873, and as the decades passed,
scholars from the 20th century began to unanimously deem this term
an appropriate descriptor for the period. This label for the late 18th
century has caused much evaluation from historians ever since the 20th
century and has had rather larger implications then possibly predicted. Since
the mid-20th century, Gilded Age historians have gone through
serious reevaluation in an effort, not to deny what happened during the period,
but rather assess the practicality of the Gilded Age as a serious and study
worthy period of the American history. In the past few decades, scholarship on
the viability of the Gilded Age, upon closer examination, has revealed some new
ways of envisioning the term “Gilded Age” and has lent itself to the question:
if the late 1800s was not the Gilded Age, they ask, then what was it? Other
historical questions surrounding this scholarship are: does the period between
the Civil War and the Progressive Era even deserve a periodization of its own
and if new historians deem the Gilded Age as not worthy of its name then do we
have to discuss the practicality of combining it with the Progressive Era as a
period of grassroots movement and establishment of a foundation for the
Progressive Era? Some primary sources that I would want to analyze would be
newspaper clippings during and after the Gilded Age period to look for the
shift in labeling this period, possibly political speeches that address the
times of the period and how it will be categorized in the future. Also, it
might be beneficial to look at historical magazine articles to see and analyze
any scholarship coming out at that time regarding the outlook of the period its
difference from the Civil War Era.

