The Debate on the American Civil War EraManchester University Press, 1999 - 255 páginas A historiographical examination of treatments of the Civil War from those that were engaged in it to those of the 1990s. The author argues for the centrality of racial assumptions both in the actual conflict and in conflicting interpretations. He traces how the historians' attitudes and assumptions were partly dictated by time and place and points to an overarching theme of the suppression of the centrality of race in the period following the end of Reconstruction in 1877 and before the emergence of the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s. Distributed by St. Martin's Press. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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... became of paramount importance , culminating in a bloody conflict of unparalleled proportions , the imposition of military rule on the South and the passing of the three Civil War amendments to the Constitution which gave the black ...
... became of paramount importance , culminating in a bloody conflict of unparalleled proportions , the imposition of military rule on the South and the passing of the three Civil War amendments to the Constitution which gave the black ...
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Hugh Tulloch. The domestic crisis became a global crisis when the United States entered the Second World War in 1941 , and the struggle for the survival of Western democratic values became also a struggle against totalitarian tyranny ...
Hugh Tulloch. The domestic crisis became a global crisis when the United States entered the Second World War in 1941 , and the struggle for the survival of Western democratic values became also a struggle against totalitarian tyranny ...
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... became ' a symbol and carrier of all sectional differences ' . But he continued to believe slavery remained a symbol and that the sectional differences of free and slave were an exaggerated psychological manifestation rather than an ...
... became ' a symbol and carrier of all sectional differences ' . But he continued to believe slavery remained a symbol and that the sectional differences of free and slave were an exaggerated psychological manifestation rather than an ...
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