Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of America: tobacco and Wal-Mart, George Washington and George Wallace, Billy Graham and Louis Armstrong. Its insular, even tribal culture produces a style of literature and politics that, in turn, ca...
The Southerner, wrote Frederick Law Olmsted in 1854, is greatly wanting in hospitality of mind, cl...
The writings of historian C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999) challenged the widely-held misconceptions reg...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
The love/hate relationship that America has with New York perhaps is surpassed only by the ambivalen...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
A pocket of Promised Land Challenging antebellum assumptions Some historians have argued--or at le...
Fresh Perspectives on Civil War Study Placing Jefferson Davis and George Gershwin in the same volume...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
It is a great honor for me to be able to formally introduce myself to our readers. I have been lucky...
This severely foreshortened anthology from the 1981 Citadel Conference on the South consists of 11 p...
The distinguished critic Lewis P. Simpson observes that Southerners tend to be too pious toward the ...
Henceforth please disregard those glossy New Yorker ads touting Atlanta's cosmopolitanism, Nashville...
Preparing issues of the Civil War Book Review, it is easy to get caught up in the sheer volume of sc...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
The Southerner, wrote Frederick Law Olmsted in 1854, is greatly wanting in hospitality of mind, cl...
The writings of historian C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999) challenged the widely-held misconceptions reg...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
The love/hate relationship that America has with New York perhaps is surpassed only by the ambivalen...
Prospects for Peace in a War-torn Country What duty does a victorious nation have to help rebuild a...
A pocket of Promised Land Challenging antebellum assumptions Some historians have argued--or at le...
Fresh Perspectives on Civil War Study Placing Jefferson Davis and George Gershwin in the same volume...
The American South and the market Two scholars take on economic history Both David Carlton and Pet...
It is a great honor for me to be able to formally introduce myself to our readers. I have been lucky...
This severely foreshortened anthology from the 1981 Citadel Conference on the South consists of 11 p...
The distinguished critic Lewis P. Simpson observes that Southerners tend to be too pious toward the ...
Henceforth please disregard those glossy New Yorker ads touting Atlanta's cosmopolitanism, Nashville...
Preparing issues of the Civil War Book Review, it is easy to get caught up in the sheer volume of sc...
In a strange land Scholar reunites American and African-American histories Between 1787 and 1791,...
Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u2...
The Southerner, wrote Frederick Law Olmsted in 1854, is greatly wanting in hospitality of mind, cl...
The writings of historian C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999) challenged the widely-held misconceptions reg...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...