A new birth of freedom. These words spoken by Abraham Lincoln on a Civil War battlefield catch what this volume intends to explore. Repeatedly wars have been seen as offering new beginnings, requiring a new start, promising rejuvenation. At the time of World War I Randolph Bourne advocated American non-intervention, seeing it as America’s chance to cut the umbilical cord with the English mother culture, as a chance for America finally to come into its own as a “transnational culture.” If war ..
In this and the next issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy we will look at issues of war...
Wars are often associated with a rhetoric of renewal or new beginnings. This essay explores this cla...
Reviewing Gregory P. Downs, After Appomattox: Military Occupation and the Ends of War (Harvard Unive...
War has been a defining moment in the history of nations and no more so than in the United States. ...
Lincoln the Final Founder Scholars have ranked Abraham Lincoln highest among all United States pres...
The article compares The Photographic History of the Civil War published in 1912, with A Photographi...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
Most countries have their export heroes that transcend their national origin: India has its Ghandi, ...
The president of the United States had been more than usually agitated ever since the news of a majo...
An Examination of American Ideals Subtitles often fail to live up to their lofty hyperbole, but ...
This article analyses Enlightenment ideas and nation-making practices in the American Civil War and ...
Edited by Edward L. Ayers, America’s War is an anthology of Civil War writing originally published b...
Drew Gilpin Faust, president of Harvard University and renowned historian of the American Civil War,...
A New Synthesis of Nineteenth-Century America I pick up Orville Vernon Burton\u27s The Age of Linco...
The American way of war—a product of two centuries of war with . . .Canada? How can that be? Civil W...
In this and the next issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy we will look at issues of war...
Wars are often associated with a rhetoric of renewal or new beginnings. This essay explores this cla...
Reviewing Gregory P. Downs, After Appomattox: Military Occupation and the Ends of War (Harvard Unive...
War has been a defining moment in the history of nations and no more so than in the United States. ...
Lincoln the Final Founder Scholars have ranked Abraham Lincoln highest among all United States pres...
The article compares The Photographic History of the Civil War published in 1912, with A Photographi...
No president has such a hold on our minds as Abraham Lincoln. He lived at the dawn of photography, ...
Most countries have their export heroes that transcend their national origin: India has its Ghandi, ...
The president of the United States had been more than usually agitated ever since the news of a majo...
An Examination of American Ideals Subtitles often fail to live up to their lofty hyperbole, but ...
This article analyses Enlightenment ideas and nation-making practices in the American Civil War and ...
Edited by Edward L. Ayers, America’s War is an anthology of Civil War writing originally published b...
Drew Gilpin Faust, president of Harvard University and renowned historian of the American Civil War,...
A New Synthesis of Nineteenth-Century America I pick up Orville Vernon Burton\u27s The Age of Linco...
The American way of war—a product of two centuries of war with . . .Canada? How can that be? Civil W...
In this and the next issue of the New England Journal of Public Policy we will look at issues of war...
Wars are often associated with a rhetoric of renewal or new beginnings. This essay explores this cla...
Reviewing Gregory P. Downs, After Appomattox: Military Occupation and the Ends of War (Harvard Unive...