This study analyses post-Civil War reunion and reconciliation, using white Southern engagement with commemorative activity as a lens through which to explore the tensions that lay behind the development of a post-Civil War American identity. It presents Fourth of July celebrations in the Reconstruction-Era South as highly politicized contested spaces and demonstrates that resumption of white Southern celebration of the Fourth was contingent on the political success of the Democratic Party. The Centennial Exhibition of 1876, a world’s fair celebrating one hundred years of American independence, provides the thesis’ central case study. The thesis demonstrates that discourse around the Exhibition reflected the fractured state of American natio...
My study investigates processed through which African Americans articulate an identification with th...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
This article examines the somewhat perplexing pride that can be shown in the antebellum and Confeder...
The one hundredth anniversary of American independence was celebrated with a huge world’s fair or ‘I...
This project traces specific patterns of representation in the American art contributions to the 187...
The history of the American South has been influenced by the identity of Southerners in gendered, re...
African American Commemorations The Control of Past and a Hold on the Future In 1989 David W. Blig...
In 1957, Congress voted to set up the United States Civil War Centennial Commission. A federally fun...
This thesis interrogates the intersection of historical memory, white Southern identity and socio-po...
This work focuses on four racially-charged controversies over commemoration in Richmond, Virginia: b...
To explain the reconciliation of the United States in the half-century after the Civil War, scholars...
National commemorative events bring to the forefront of public discourse issues of identity and mean...
Following the end of the Civil War, the revisionist myth of the Lost Cause spread over the South as ...
This diploma thesis focuses on the role of the American Civil War memory in the American society tod...
This article examines the commemoration of the American Civil War via the symbolic structure of “fra...
My study investigates processed through which African Americans articulate an identification with th...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
This article examines the somewhat perplexing pride that can be shown in the antebellum and Confeder...
The one hundredth anniversary of American independence was celebrated with a huge world’s fair or ‘I...
This project traces specific patterns of representation in the American art contributions to the 187...
The history of the American South has been influenced by the identity of Southerners in gendered, re...
African American Commemorations The Control of Past and a Hold on the Future In 1989 David W. Blig...
In 1957, Congress voted to set up the United States Civil War Centennial Commission. A federally fun...
This thesis interrogates the intersection of historical memory, white Southern identity and socio-po...
This work focuses on four racially-charged controversies over commemoration in Richmond, Virginia: b...
To explain the reconciliation of the United States in the half-century after the Civil War, scholars...
National commemorative events bring to the forefront of public discourse issues of identity and mean...
Following the end of the Civil War, the revisionist myth of the Lost Cause spread over the South as ...
This diploma thesis focuses on the role of the American Civil War memory in the American society tod...
This article examines the commemoration of the American Civil War via the symbolic structure of “fra...
My study investigates processed through which African Americans articulate an identification with th...
This dissertation is a study of organized, professional history in the American South centered on tw...
This article examines the somewhat perplexing pride that can be shown in the antebellum and Confeder...