Anna Koivusalo examines arch-secessionist James Chesnut’s emotions in The Man Who Started the Civil War: James Chesnut, Honor, and Emotion in the American South. Reviewer R. Boyd Murphree writes that Koivusalo expands our understanding of honor, which she demonstrates was an emotion, “not just a code of conduct.” The Man Who Started the Civil War “is academic in the best sense of the word: analytic, revelatory, and innovative,” Murphree writes
Ethnicity and the Civil War The explosion of social histories of the Civil War over the last two de...
A Reassessment of the Secession Crisis A prolific scholar, William J. Cooper, has made major contrib...
For generations, notable scholars such as Gerald Linderman, Reid Mitchell and Joseph Glatthaar, have...
This study examines honor and honorable emotional expressions in the nineteenth-century American Sou...
Reconstruction has been seen as the period of redeeming lost southern honor. I argue, however, that ...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
Reading through the contributions to the Fall 2022 issue of the Civil War Book Review, one notices u...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Since the publication of Bertram Wyatt-Brown’s groundbreaking work, Southern Honor, it has become so...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
The Old Dominion\u27s Civil WarA New Look at Virginia This anthology features contributions from ei...
Of all the events in American life, none seems to have stimulated the production of a greater bulk o...
The Many Lives of John R. Kelso John R. Kelso led an unusual and tumultuous life: Methodist minister...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Ethnicity and the Civil War The explosion of social histories of the Civil War over the last two de...
A Reassessment of the Secession Crisis A prolific scholar, William J. Cooper, has made major contrib...
For generations, notable scholars such as Gerald Linderman, Reid Mitchell and Joseph Glatthaar, have...
This study examines honor and honorable emotional expressions in the nineteenth-century American Sou...
Reconstruction has been seen as the period of redeeming lost southern honor. I argue, however, that ...
Although the Civil War is a topic that historian C. Vann Woodward directly addressed only in late li...
Reading through the contributions to the Fall 2022 issue of the Civil War Book Review, one notices u...
Understanding the Civil War Experience The books featured in this issue of Civil War Book Review ca...
The Civil War and the Lives of Americans After reading the books reviewed in this issue of Civil Wa...
Since the publication of Bertram Wyatt-Brown’s groundbreaking work, Southern Honor, it has become so...
a brilliant attorney and political insider, William Pitt Ballinger was one of the most powerful men ...
The Old Dominion\u27s Civil WarA New Look at Virginia This anthology features contributions from ei...
Of all the events in American life, none seems to have stimulated the production of a greater bulk o...
The Many Lives of John R. Kelso John R. Kelso led an unusual and tumultuous life: Methodist minister...
Understanding the Transformation of a Region Twenty years after Appomattox, in an 1885 Memorial Day ...
Ethnicity and the Civil War The explosion of social histories of the Civil War over the last two de...
A Reassessment of the Secession Crisis A prolific scholar, William J. Cooper, has made major contrib...
For generations, notable scholars such as Gerald Linderman, Reid Mitchell and Joseph Glatthaar, have...