Picturing the Civil War Gary W. Gallagher has done his fair share of shaping what historians know about the Civil War. In his latest book, Causes Won, Lost and Forgotten, he investigates how modern film and artworks determine what the American public knows about the conflict. I...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
Perhaps it is because I have spent so much time with people for whom the Civil War is a life choice,...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
Understanding the Origins of a Controversial Sherman This is not just a book about the Lost Cause; t...
Analyzing the Importance of Union In 1997, Gary Gallagher’s The Confederate War invigorated scholarl...
From Birth of a Nation to Cold Mountain, hundreds of directors, actors, and screenwriters have used ...
America is obsessed with its Civil War. Within months of its end, those who won and lost the war beg...
In a paper delivered in April at the 30th annual conference of the Popular Cultural Association, Dav...
The Civil War’s Long Shadow Coming on the heels of social unrest in St. Louis County and released am...
The Civil War on the Silver Screen Brian Steel Wills\u27s new book Gone with the Glory, one of ju...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Media productions have often turned to history as a source for a narrative. Wars have been refought,...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
Perhaps it is because I have spent so much time with people for whom the Civil War is a life choice,...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
Understanding the Origins of a Controversial Sherman This is not just a book about the Lost Cause; t...
Analyzing the Importance of Union In 1997, Gary Gallagher’s The Confederate War invigorated scholarl...
From Birth of a Nation to Cold Mountain, hundreds of directors, actors, and screenwriters have used ...
America is obsessed with its Civil War. Within months of its end, those who won and lost the war beg...
In a paper delivered in April at the 30th annual conference of the Popular Cultural Association, Dav...
The Civil War’s Long Shadow Coming on the heels of social unrest in St. Louis County and released am...
The Civil War on the Silver Screen Brian Steel Wills\u27s new book Gone with the Glory, one of ju...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Media productions have often turned to history as a source for a narrative. Wars have been refought,...
Civil War historians spend so much of their craft on examining the minutiae and the nuts and bolts o...
750,000 and rising. 2.5 percent of the population. Greater than all other American wars combined. No...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
Perhaps it is because I have spent so much time with people for whom the Civil War is a life choice,...