Book Description
A monumental and detailed work, first published in 1866. A history of the Confederate cause including the events leading to the war, major occurrences of the war, and the text of the Confederate Constitution.
Author : Edward Alfred Pollard
Publisher : Random House Value Publishing
Page : 1320 pages
File Size : 14,71 MB
Release : 1990
Category : History
ISBN :
A monumental and detailed work, first published in 1866. A history of the Confederate cause including the events leading to the war, major occurrences of the war, and the text of the Confederate Constitution.
Author : Edward Alfred Pollard
Publisher :
Page : 1350 pages
File Size : 43,70 MB
Release : 1866
Category : Confederate States of America
ISBN :
Author : Edward Alfred Pollard
Publisher :
Page : 780 pages
File Size : 45,31 MB
Release : 1866
Category : Confederate States of America
ISBN :
Author : Edward Alfred Pollard
Publisher :
Page : 426 pages
File Size : 30,58 MB
Release : 1865
Category : United States
ISBN :
Author : David Goldfield
Publisher : LSU Press
Page : 397 pages
File Size : 46,20 MB
Release : 2013-04-15
Category : History
ISBN : 080715217X
In the updated edition of his sweeping narrative on southern history, David Goldfield brings this extensive study into the present with a timely assessment of the unresolved issues surrounding the Civil War's sesquicentennial commemoration. Traversing a hundred and fifty years of memory, Goldfield confronts the remnants of the American Civil War that survive in the hearts of many of the South's residents and in the national news headlines of battle flags, racial injustice, and religious conflicts. Goldfield candidly discusses how and why white southern men fashioned the myths of the Lost Cause and Redemption out of the Civil War and Reconstruction, and how they shaped a religion to canonize the heroes and deify the events of those fateful years. He also recounts how groups of blacks and white women eventually crafted a different, more inclusive version of southern history and how that new vision competed with more traditional perspectives. The battle for southern history, and for the South, continues—in museums, public spaces, books, state legislatures, and the minds of southerners. Given the region's growing economic power and political influence, understanding this war takes on national significance. Through an analysis of ideas of history and memory, religion, race, and gender, Still Fighting the Civil War provides us with a better understanding of the South and one another.
Author : Edward L. Ayers
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 140 pages
File Size : 36,80 MB
Release : 2006-08-17
Category : History
ISBN : 0393285154
“An extremely good writer, [Ayers] is well worth reading . . . on the South and Southern history.”—Stephen Sears, Boston Globe The Southern past has proven to be fertile ground for great works of history. Peculiarities of tragic proportions—a system of slavery flourishing in a land of freedom, secession and Civil War tearing at a federal Union, deep poverty persisting in a nation of fast-paced development—have fed the imaginations of some of our most accomplished historians. Foremost in their ranks today is Edward L. Ayers, author of the award-winning and ongoing study of the Civil War in the heart of America, the Valley of the Shadow Project. In wide-ranging essays on the Civil War, the New South, and the twentieth-century South, Ayers turns over the rich soil of Southern life to explore the sources of the nation's and his own history. The title essay, original here, distills his vast research and offers a fresh perspective on the nation's central historical event.
Author : Edward L. Ayers
Publisher : LSU Press
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 12,37 MB
Release : 2020-11-11
Category : History
ISBN : 0807173010
Taking a wide focus, Southern Journey narrates the evolution of southern history from the founding of the nation to the present day by focusing on the settling, unsettling, and resettling of the South. Using migration as the dominant theme of southern history and including indigenous, white, black, and immigrant people in the story, Edward L. Ayers cuts across the usual geographic, thematic, and chronological boundaries that subdivide southern history. Ayers explains the major contours and events of the southern past from a fresh perspective, weaving geography with history in innovative ways. He uses unique color maps created with sophisticated geographic information system (GIS) tools to interpret massive data sets from a humanistic perspective, providing a view of movement within the South with a clarity, detail, and continuity we have not seen before. The South has never stood still; it is—and always has been—changing in deep, radical, sometimes contradictory ways, often in divergent directions. Ayers’s history of migration in the South is a broad yet deep reinterpretation of the region’s past that informs our understanding of the population, economy, politics, and culture of the South today. Southern Journey is not only a pioneering work of history; it is a grand recasting of the South’s past by one of its most renowned and appreciated scholars.
Author : Edward Alfred Pollard
Publisher :
Page : 424 pages
File Size : 29,96 MB
Release : 1865
Category : Confederate States of America
ISBN :
Author : Sir Arthur James Lyon Fremantle
Publisher : Edinburgh and London, W. Blackwood and sons. 1863.
Page : 366 pages
File Size : 47,80 MB
Release : 1863
Category : History
ISBN :
Author : Comer Vann Woodward (historien).)
Publisher :
Page : 173 pages
File Size : 33,69 MB
Release : 1969
Category : Southern States
ISBN :