How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory continues to generate public debates, most often over the Confederate flag and Confederate monuments. It has also long attracted the attention of historians who have published a seemingly endless s...
Understanding the Unfinished Revolution Historians continue to debate the degree to which the new fr...
A Study of how we Remember In this slender volume, a revised version of his Lamar Memorial Lectures ...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
A Wider View of Reconstruction For too many Americans, the Reconstruction era is an afterthought, or...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Exhuming emancipation A scholarly act of reparation This excellent and provocative collection of e...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
Remembering the war while restoring the Union At 3:00 PM on July 3, 2013 several hundred Union re-en...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
Between the years 2015 and 2020, over 300 Confederate symbols, including over 140 monuments, were re...
In the wake of Dylann Roof’s murders at a Charleston church and another death during the violence at...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
Understanding the Unfinished Revolution Historians continue to debate the degree to which the new fr...
A Study of how we Remember In this slender volume, a revised version of his Lamar Memorial Lectures ...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...
If Robert J. Cook’s Civil War Memories: Contesting the Past in the United States since 1865 makes on...
A Wider View of Reconstruction For too many Americans, the Reconstruction era is an afterthought, or...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Exhuming emancipation A scholarly act of reparation This excellent and provocative collection of e...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
Remembering the war while restoring the Union At 3:00 PM on July 3, 2013 several hundred Union re-en...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
Secession after the Civil War? Of all the latest contributions to the historiography of the Civil Wa...
Between the years 2015 and 2020, over 300 Confederate symbols, including over 140 monuments, were re...
In the wake of Dylann Roof’s murders at a Charleston church and another death during the violence at...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
Understanding the Unfinished Revolution Historians continue to debate the degree to which the new fr...
A Study of how we Remember In this slender volume, a revised version of his Lamar Memorial Lectures ...
Continual Strife and Public Memory Commemorations in the aftermath of the War In the aftermath of ...