Revising Old Narratives of Guerrilla Warfare during the Civil War This very valuable collection builds from the foundational works by Michael Fellman, Inside War (1989), and Daniel E. Sutherland, A Savage Conflict (2009). It aims, as the editors explain, to contextualize Fel...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
This book is an example of the movement in recent years in the publication of books on the American ...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
A New Collection on Civil War Guerrillas The essays in this collection continue the conversation sta...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
Heroes from Another Land: Confederate Guerrillas and the making of the Wild West Few events in Ameri...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
What it Took to Win in Civil War Missouri In this concise, well-illustrated narrative, the author, a...
War crimes Essays dissect sinister practice It has become almost trite to note how popular scholar...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Remembering the Guerrilla War Civil War guerrillas existed in a world cloaked in secrecy as they pa...
A Savage War and the Foundations of American Military Power Iis nearly a truism that the American Ci...
Looking at Warfare through New Lenses Interpreting the accretion of private and public violence ...
The Voices of Slaves Speak on the Civil War Of late Civil War historians have succeeded in balan...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
This book is an example of the movement in recent years in the publication of books on the American ...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...
A New Collection on Civil War Guerrillas The essays in this collection continue the conversation sta...
Fifteen years have passed since Daniel E. Sutherland unfurled the black flag and declared the guerri...
Civil War Guerrillas Most of the history that has been written about the American Civil War conc...
Heroes from Another Land: Confederate Guerrillas and the making of the Wild West Few events in Ameri...
A New Look at a Different Kind of War An old truism warns historians that their books often refl...
What it Took to Win in Civil War Missouri In this concise, well-illustrated narrative, the author, a...
War crimes Essays dissect sinister practice It has become almost trite to note how popular scholar...
We are embattled still Americans wrestle with collective memory The Civil War is the most widely s...
Remembering the Guerrilla War Civil War guerrillas existed in a world cloaked in secrecy as they pa...
A Savage War and the Foundations of American Military Power Iis nearly a truism that the American Ci...
Looking at Warfare through New Lenses Interpreting the accretion of private and public violence ...
The Voices of Slaves Speak on the Civil War Of late Civil War historians have succeeded in balan...
The father of history, Herodotus, in The Histories, wrote so that human achievement may not become f...
This book is an example of the movement in recent years in the publication of books on the American ...
Defining the Nature of Combat Like many scholars who study the culture impact of wartime violenc...