Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking into almost every aspect of civil war memory. Few would question the significance of the bloody conflict in the history of the South, shaping white southern identity even into contemp...
Sculpting the Lost Cause Preserving Confederate glory in stone ...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
This paper addresses the disparate commemorative modes and purposes employed by black and white Sout...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
This article examines the commemoration of the American Civil War via the symbolic structure of “fra...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
A Slower, Less Traveled Road to Reunion More than three quarters of a century ago historian Paul Buc...
Sculpting the Lost Cause Preserving Confederate glory in stone ...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
By the end of the Civil War, fatalities from that conflict had far exceeded previous American experi...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
This paper addresses the disparate commemorative modes and purposes employed by black and white Sout...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
This article examines the commemoration of the American Civil War via the symbolic structure of “fra...
Fighting the Battle of Memory Remembering the Battle of the Crater: War as Murder by Kevin Levin off...
A Slower, Less Traveled Road to Reunion More than three quarters of a century ago historian Paul Buc...
Sculpting the Lost Cause Preserving Confederate glory in stone ...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...