Examination of honor culture and attitudes toward death and dying found in letters, diaries, and newspapers - from the colonial and revolutionary period through the Civil War era - strongly suggests that Civil War soldiers did not suffer from psychological combat trauma. Psychological combat trauma is as much a part of today's war as uniforms and ammunition, but this was not the reality for Civil War Americans. The truth is that all wars are terrible for those who fight them, and physical stresses of battle have been part of warfare in every age. Twentieth-century ideas of the psychological effects of war differ vastly from those of the nineteenth century. Civil War battle offered potential for psychiatric trauma. Civil War soldiers, howeve...
“War means fighting, and fighting means killing.” Famed Confederate cavalryman Nathan Bedford Forres...
The demands that come with war can be both physically and mentally traumatizing and damaging to the ...
This study explores how ordinary Americans could be made to fight a brutal and immoral war, and expl...
Examination of honor culture and attitudes toward death and dying found in letters, diaries, and new...
The twentieth century has been called the bloodiest century in human history. In two world wars and ...
War is traumatic. Since the American Psychiatric Association first recognized post-traumatic stress ...
This study examines the causes, perception, and treatment of violence and crime committed by veteran...
The military has a long tradition of distributing honors to its soldiers in a calculated and uneven ...
The military has a long tradition of distributing honors to its soldiers in a calculated and uneven ...
War on the Mind: Trauma and Coping in the Union Army, is a work of social, cultural, and military h...
“Medics carried more responsibilities than dry feet, salt tablets, syphilis, and puncture wounds,” U...
This dissertation examines combat trauma under U.S. militarism, tracking its psychosomatic effects a...
There has been a long-term suspicion in religious and psychological literatures that unethical wars ...
With Veterans Day, November provides a special moment for us to remember that real people have passe...
This work uses the life of one man, Brigadier General Maxcy Gregg, to assess the life cycle of honor...
“War means fighting, and fighting means killing.” Famed Confederate cavalryman Nathan Bedford Forres...
The demands that come with war can be both physically and mentally traumatizing and damaging to the ...
This study explores how ordinary Americans could be made to fight a brutal and immoral war, and expl...
Examination of honor culture and attitudes toward death and dying found in letters, diaries, and new...
The twentieth century has been called the bloodiest century in human history. In two world wars and ...
War is traumatic. Since the American Psychiatric Association first recognized post-traumatic stress ...
This study examines the causes, perception, and treatment of violence and crime committed by veteran...
The military has a long tradition of distributing honors to its soldiers in a calculated and uneven ...
The military has a long tradition of distributing honors to its soldiers in a calculated and uneven ...
War on the Mind: Trauma and Coping in the Union Army, is a work of social, cultural, and military h...
“Medics carried more responsibilities than dry feet, salt tablets, syphilis, and puncture wounds,” U...
This dissertation examines combat trauma under U.S. militarism, tracking its psychosomatic effects a...
There has been a long-term suspicion in religious and psychological literatures that unethical wars ...
With Veterans Day, November provides a special moment for us to remember that real people have passe...
This work uses the life of one man, Brigadier General Maxcy Gregg, to assess the life cycle of honor...
“War means fighting, and fighting means killing.” Famed Confederate cavalryman Nathan Bedford Forres...
The demands that come with war can be both physically and mentally traumatizing and damaging to the ...
This study explores how ordinary Americans could be made to fight a brutal and immoral war, and expl...