The distinguished critic Lewis P. Simpson observes that Southerners tend to be too pious toward the past and not sufficiently ironical toward the successive changes wrought upon their soil. His observation came to mind recently, when our editorial office received a review copy of a tract excoriating...
A review essay of two recent books on political opposition in the North during the American Civil Wa...
We often study history so that we can better understand ourselves, so that we can understand how eve...
A paradox of Southern modernism Foote blurs the past and present of the Civil War Shelby Foote cer...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
The Civil War Influence on an American Literary Icon In his 1953 book The Civil War, the southern wr...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
With the new year, the Civil War Book Review has undergone a few changes. You may have noticed that ...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Transforming past and present: The historian\u27s role in shaping the New South The southern com...
In war: resolution. In defeat: defiance. In victory: magnanimity. In peace: goodwill. If Jan Morris...
A New Synthesis of Nineteenth-Century America I pick up Orville Vernon Burton\u27s The Age of Linco...
A Contrarian Look at Union Soldiers in the Election of 1864 Although Jonathan White completed his di...
Long have historians studied history by examining the political actors and politics of those involve...
In a paper delivered in April at the 30th annual conference of the Popular Cultural Association, Dav...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
A review essay of two recent books on political opposition in the North during the American Civil Wa...
We often study history so that we can better understand ourselves, so that we can understand how eve...
A paradox of Southern modernism Foote blurs the past and present of the Civil War Shelby Foote cer...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
The Civil War Influence on an American Literary Icon In his 1953 book The Civil War, the southern wr...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
With the new year, the Civil War Book Review has undergone a few changes. You may have noticed that ...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Transforming past and present: The historian\u27s role in shaping the New South The southern com...
In war: resolution. In defeat: defiance. In victory: magnanimity. In peace: goodwill. If Jan Morris...
A New Synthesis of Nineteenth-Century America I pick up Orville Vernon Burton\u27s The Age of Linco...
A Contrarian Look at Union Soldiers in the Election of 1864 Although Jonathan White completed his di...
Long have historians studied history by examining the political actors and politics of those involve...
In a paper delivered in April at the 30th annual conference of the Popular Cultural Association, Dav...
The superb essays in Lincoln and His Contemporaries were developed from the Centennial Lincoln Sympo...
A review essay of two recent books on political opposition in the North during the American Civil Wa...
We often study history so that we can better understand ourselves, so that we can understand how eve...
A paradox of Southern modernism Foote blurs the past and present of the Civil War Shelby Foote cer...