Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing books on the topic. Since at least the 1940s, the topic has attracted many scholars, who, like Robert Penn Warren, seem to have concluded that “at the moment of death the Confederacy entered upon it...
This paper addresses the disparate commemorative modes and purposes employed by black and white Sout...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
Exploring the Lost Cause Arriving as it does well after celebrated works on the same general subject...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Scholars of the Lost Cause have tended to end their examinations of the Confederate commemorative mo...
Picturing the Civil War Gary W. Gallagher has done his fair share of shaping what historians kn...
Sculpting the Lost Cause Preserving Confederate glory in stone ...
A half-century after the end of the Civil War, sectional tensions still existed in St. Louis. Patri...
Understanding the Origins of a Controversial Sherman This is not just a book about the Lost Cause; t...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
The Lost Cause is an ideology that falsely portrays the antebellum South as an idyllic, agrarian soc...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
This paper addresses the disparate commemorative modes and purposes employed by black and white Sout...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
Exploring the Lost Cause Arriving as it does well after celebrated works on the same general subject...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
How Historians Remember the Civil War Many people tend to view Civil War commemoration as an almos...
Scholars of the Lost Cause have tended to end their examinations of the Confederate commemorative mo...
Picturing the Civil War Gary W. Gallagher has done his fair share of shaping what historians kn...
Sculpting the Lost Cause Preserving Confederate glory in stone ...
A half-century after the end of the Civil War, sectional tensions still existed in St. Louis. Patri...
Understanding the Origins of a Controversial Sherman This is not just a book about the Lost Cause; t...
Sesquicentennial commemoration all over the country, and indeed the world, draws to a close this sum...
The Lost Cause is an ideology that falsely portrays the antebellum South as an idyllic, agrarian soc...
A fresh look at a lesser known battle As the sesquicentennial celebration of the Civil War continues...
Conflict and Commemoration Remembering the Civil War Even during the period of the Civil War cent...
This paper addresses the disparate commemorative modes and purposes employed by black and white Sout...
How and Why Americans Remember Reconstruction -- and Why They May be Forgetting It Civil War memory ...
Exploring the Lost Cause Arriving as it does well after celebrated works on the same general subject...