Honoring a Giant in Southern History I vividly remember the first time I read Bertram Wyatt-Brown\u27s Southern Honor: Ethics and Behavior in the Old South. In Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1982, we had a small but vital group of scholars working in southern history. From word of mo...
I am proud to present to you the Civil War Book Review\u27s Fifth Anniversary Issue. Conceived by D...
Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews. Edited by Regina D. S...
Since the publication of Bertram Wyatt-Brown’s groundbreaking work, Southern Honor, it has become so...
A Tribute to the Career and Scholarship of William J. Cooper, Jr. In more ways than one, William J. ...
For southern historians it sometimes seems as if our understanding of southern masculinity has not p...
It is a great honor for me to be able to formally introduce myself to our readers. I have been lucky...
A scholar\u27s service Perspectives on a life\u27s work I am thrilled to review Beverly Jarrett\u2...
Though an oft-parodied stereotype today, the treasured expectations of manliness were intractable an...
Confederate Nationalism Historians Honor a Colleague Recipients of a festschrift or honorary coll...
An Interdisciplinary Perspective of the Civil War David Madden is one of the South\u27s most produc...
A Yankee Scholar in Coastal South Carolina: William Francis Allen’s Civil War Journals. Edited by Ja...
Common Soldiers, Uncommon Historian More than a few of my fellow graduate students in the seminar o...
In an interview with a Baton Rouge radio station in 1968, John Hazard Wildman, an author and English...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
I am proud to present to you the Civil War Book Review\u27s Fifth Anniversary Issue. Conceived by D...
Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews. Edited by Regina D. S...
Since the publication of Bertram Wyatt-Brown’s groundbreaking work, Southern Honor, it has become so...
A Tribute to the Career and Scholarship of William J. Cooper, Jr. In more ways than one, William J. ...
For southern historians it sometimes seems as if our understanding of southern masculinity has not p...
It is a great honor for me to be able to formally introduce myself to our readers. I have been lucky...
A scholar\u27s service Perspectives on a life\u27s work I am thrilled to review Beverly Jarrett\u2...
Though an oft-parodied stereotype today, the treasured expectations of manliness were intractable an...
Confederate Nationalism Historians Honor a Colleague Recipients of a festschrift or honorary coll...
An Interdisciplinary Perspective of the Civil War David Madden is one of the South\u27s most produc...
A Yankee Scholar in Coastal South Carolina: William Francis Allen’s Civil War Journals. Edited by Ja...
Common Soldiers, Uncommon Historian More than a few of my fellow graduate students in the seminar o...
In an interview with a Baton Rouge radio station in 1968, John Hazard Wildman, an author and English...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
Southern viewThe export economy of the South has contributed a distinct legacy to the rest of Americ...
I am proud to present to you the Civil War Book Review\u27s Fifth Anniversary Issue. Conceived by D...
Varieties of Southern Religious History: Essays in Honor of Donald G. Mathews. Edited by Regina D. S...
Since the publication of Bertram Wyatt-Brown’s groundbreaking work, Southern Honor, it has become so...