Fresh Analysis Considers Civil War’s Horror Scattered throughout Civil War archives, composed deathbed scenes swaddled in melodrama and pathos have elicited more than a few critical eye rolls from researchers. Did the entire hospital really join together in song? Is the chaplain’s acco...
Seeking Heaven in the Face of Hell The rising importance of social history in the study of the C...
A Neglected Study Religion and the Civil War Era As the editors note in their introduction, the ...
Inspired by a recent “dark turn” in Civil War historiography, Diane Miller Sommerville’s Aberration ...
In 2008, Drew Gilpin Faust’s This Republic of Suffering opened the way for what some scholars have s...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Collecting the Voices of the Living and the Dead In the summer of 1862, Katherine Prescott Wormeley,...
Mothering the maimed Women overcame wartime conditions to heal soldiers One reads this book with m...
Though no theme binds together this issue’s reviews, multiple reviewed books are in conversations wi...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
The Issue of Public Health in a Time of War At the American Sociological Association’s annual meetin...
A Reexamination of Civil War Medecine Currently scholarship has surged regarding the Civil War era’s...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Seeking Heaven in the Face of Hell The rising importance of social history in the study of the C...
A Neglected Study Religion and the Civil War Era As the editors note in their introduction, the ...
Inspired by a recent “dark turn” in Civil War historiography, Diane Miller Sommerville’s Aberration ...
In 2008, Drew Gilpin Faust’s This Republic of Suffering opened the way for what some scholars have s...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
Collecting the Voices of the Living and the Dead In the summer of 1862, Katherine Prescott Wormeley,...
Mothering the maimed Women overcame wartime conditions to heal soldiers One reads this book with m...
Though no theme binds together this issue’s reviews, multiple reviewed books are in conversations wi...
Do Unto Others Competing groups offered aid to the dying Throughout history it seems the best in p...
Death and Dying in the Civil War Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America’s Cul...
The Issue of Public Health in a Time of War At the American Sociological Association’s annual meetin...
A Reexamination of Civil War Medecine Currently scholarship has surged regarding the Civil War era’s...
Breaking the Chains of Civil War Prison History As in WWII, many combatants and former POWs of t...
Secession in the Cemetery Crafting the Cause Victorious Scholars of American history are looking i...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Seeking Heaven in the Face of Hell The rising importance of social history in the study of the C...
A Neglected Study Religion and the Civil War Era As the editors note in their introduction, the ...
Inspired by a recent “dark turn” in Civil War historiography, Diane Miller Sommerville’s Aberration ...