|
Product Description
David Blight takes his readers back to the Civil War’s centennial celebration to determine how Americans made sense of the suffering, loss, and liberation a century earlier. He shows how four of America’s most incisive writers—Robert Penn Warren, Bruce Catton, Edmund Wilson, and James Baldwin—explored the gulf between remembrance and reality.Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory
- Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom
- Searching for Black Confederates: The Civil War's Most Persistent Myth (Civil War America)
- The Legacy of the Civil War
- Civil War Monuments and the Militarization of America (Civil War America)
- A Slave No More: Two Men Who Escaped to Freedom, Including Their Own Narratives of Emancipation
- Dixie's Daughters: The United Daughters of the Confederacy and the Preservation of Confederate Culture
- Clinging to Mammy: The Faithful Slave in Twentieth-Century America
- Wounds of Returning: Race, Memory, and Property on the Postslavery Plantation (New Directions in Southern Studies)
- Confederate Visions: Nationalism, Symbolism, and the Imagined South in the Civil War (A Nation Divided: Studies in the Civil War Era)
*If this is not the "American Oracle" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 13, 2024 00:04 +08.