MOMENTAN AUSVERKAUFT

Civil War America Ser.: Creating a Confederate Kentucky : The Lost Cause and Civil War Memory in a Border State by Anne E. Marshall (2010, Hardcover)

Über dieses Produkt

Product Identifiers

PublisherUniversity of North Carolina Press
ISBN-10080783436X
ISBN-139780807834367
eBay Product ID (ePID)17038791524

Product Key Features

Number of Pages256 Pages
Publication NameCreating a Confederate Kentucky : the Lost Cause and Civil War Memory in a Border State
LanguageEnglish
SubjectUnited States / State & Local / South (Al, Ar, Fl, Ga, Ky, La, ms, Nc, SC, Tn, VA, WV), United States / Civil War Period (1850-1877), Cognitive Psychology & Cognition, United States / General
Publication Year2010
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaPsychology, History
AuthorAnne E. Marshall
SeriesCivil War America Ser.
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height1 in
Item Weight2 Oz
Item Length9.2 in
Item Width6.1 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN2010-020419
Reviews"Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict. . . . Will be a nice addition to your Confederate/Kentucky library shelf. . . . Excellent." -- Lone Star Book Review, "Marshall's book is beautifully written and truly a pleasure to read."-- Journal of Southern History, Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of i|9780807834367|, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." - Civil War Book Review, Creating a Confederate Kentucky is a welcome addition to the study of post-Civil War Kentucky. . . . Those who teach the history of Kentucky and of the Civil War and Reconstruction will find this book a valuable addition to their reading lists.-- Journal of the Civil War Era, "Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended."-- Midwest Book Review, "An excellent book: tightly argued, richly detailed, and elegantly written. It is a model of what a state study can do, showing the importance of not just race, but also place, to the story of the Lost Cause." - Civil War Monitor, "An interesting, informative book. It helps clarify the experiences of many of us who grew up in Kentucky. . . . The book has set a new standard." -The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, "Marshall has crafted an easily read, easily comprehensible scholarly volume. Recommended. All levels/libraries."-- Choice, "An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process of reconciliation or the years after the Civil War." -- TOCWOC: A Civil War Blog, An interesting, informative book. It helps clarify the experiences of many of us who grew up in Kentucky. . . . The book has set a new standard. -- The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended.-- Midwest Book Review, "Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended." -- Midwest Book Review, "An excellent book: tightly argued, richly detailed, and elegantly written. It is a model of what a state study can do, showing the importance of not just race, but also place, to the story of the Lost Cause."-- Civil War Monitor, "Marshall has crafted an easily read, easily comprehensible scholarly volume. Recommended. All levels/libraries." - Choice, " Creating a Confederate Kentucky is a welcome addition to the study of post-Civil War Kentucky.... Those who teach the history of Kentucky and of the Civil War and Reconstruction will find this book a valuable addition to their reading lists." - Journal of the Civil War Era, "Marshall has illuminated an important and understudied aspect of how a border region simultaneously departed from and reflected broader patterns of memory. Marshall's excellent study will refine our understanding of how contested and unpredictable memory was and continues to be." -- The American Historical Review, Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking.|9780807834367|, An excellent book: tightly argued, richly detailed, and elegantly written. It is a model of what a state study can do, showing the importance of not just race, but also place, to the story of the Lost Cause. -- Civil War Monitor, An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process o|9780807834367|, "By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests claim ownership of history."-- The Journal of American History, By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests claim ownership of history. -- The Journal of American History, "Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended."-- Midwest, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study .[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." - Civil War Book Review, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory studye.[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." - Civil War Book Review, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study….[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." - Civil War Book Review, Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking.-- Civil War Book Review, "Marshall's book is a good read, and it will be of much interest to those seeking a better understanding not only of Kentucky's key role in the 1860s, but also of how all of us have remembered the war ever since."-- Blue & Gray Magazine, "By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests claim ownership of history." -- The Journal of American History, Marshall has illuminated an important and understudied aspect of how a border region simultaneously departed from and reflected broader patterns of memory. Marshall's excellent study will refine our understanding of how contested and unpredictable memory was and continues to be.-- The American Historical Review, "Marshall's book is a good read, and it will be of much interest to those seeking a better understanding not only of Kentucky's key role in the 1860s, but also of how all of us have remembered the war ever since." - Blue & Gray Magazine, Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended. -- Midwest Book Review, Marshall has crafted an easily read, easily comprehensible scholarly volume. Recommended. All levels/libraries.-- Choice, "Examines all sides of Kentucky's Union-Confederate postwar dialogue. . . . [A] thoughtful, carefully researched and plausibly presented historical study, illustrated with a handful of vintage black-and-white photographs. Highly recommended." - Midwest Book Review, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking."-- Civil War Book Review, "An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process of reconciliation or the years after the Civil War." -TOCWOC: A Civil War Blog, "Marshall's book is beautifully written and truly a pleasure to read."-- - Journal Of Southern History, "An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process of reconciliation or the years after the Civil War."--TOCWOC: A Civil War Blog, Marshall's book is a good read, and it will be of much interest to those seeking a better understanding not only of Kentucky's key role in the 1860s, but also of how all of us have remembered the war ever since.-- Blue & Gray Magazine, Marshall has crafted an easily read, easily comprehensible scholarly volume. Recommended. All levels/libraries. -- CHOICE, By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests cl|9780807834367|, Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict. . . . Will be a nice addition to your Confederate/Kentucky library shelf. . . . Excellent. -- Lone Star Book Review, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study'_¦.[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." - Civil War Book Review, An excellent book: tightly argued, richly detailed, and elegantly written. It is a model of what a state study can do, showing the importance of not just race, but also place, to the story of the Lost Cause.-- Civil War Monitor, An interesting, informative book. It helps clarify the experiences of many of us who grew up in Kentucky. . . . The book has set a new standard.-- The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, "An excellent book: tightly argued, richly detailed, and elegantly written. It is a model of what a state study can do, showing the importance of not just race, but also place, to the story of the Lost Cause." -- Civil War Monitor, " Creating a Confederate Kentucky is a welcome addition to the study of post-Civil War Kentucky. . . . Those who teach the history of Kentucky and of the Civil War and Reconstruction will find this book a valuable addition to their reading lists."--, "An interesting, informative book. It helps clarify the experiences of many of us who grew up in Kentucky. . . . The book has set a new standard." -- The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, "Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict. . . . Will be a nice addition to your Confederate/Kentucky library shelf. . . . Excellent." - Lone Star Book Review, Marshall has illuminated an important and understudied aspect of how a border region simultaneously departed from and reflected broader patterns of memory. Marshall's excellent study will refine our understanding of how contested and unpredictable memory was and continues to be. -- The American Historical Review, Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict. . . . Will be a nice addition to your Confederate/Kentucky library shelf. . . . Excellent.-- Lone Star Book Review, Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking. -- Civil War Book Review, "By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests claim ownership of history." - The Journal of American History, "An interesting, informative book. It helps clarify the experiences of many of us who grew up in Kentucky. . . . The book has set a new standard."-- The Kentucky Civil War Bugle, An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process of reconciliation or the years after the Civil War. -- TOCWOC: A Civil War Blog, "Marshall has crafted an easily read, easily comprehensible scholarly volume. Recommended. All levels/libraries." -- CHOICE, "Marshall has illuminated an important and understudied aspect of how a border region simultaneously departed from and reflected broader patterns of memory. Marshall's excellent study will refine our understanding of how contested and unpredictable memory was and continues to be."-- The American Historical Review, "Marshall has illuminated an important and understudied aspect of how a border region simultaneously departed from and reflected broader patterns of memory. Marshall's excellent study will refine our understanding of how contested and unpredictable memory was and continues to be." - The American Historical Review, "Rather than focusing exclusively on postwar political and economic factors, Creating a Confederate Kentucky looks over the longer term at Kentuckians' activities . . . by which they commemorated the Civil War and fixed the state's remembrance of it for sixty years following the conflict. . . . Will be a nice addition to your Confederate/Kentucky library shelf. . . . Excellent."-- Lone Star Book Review, An intelligent narrative. . . . The author writes well and is easy to read. . . . A valuable and serious history of the development of Confederate memory in Kentucky and in America. . . . An excellent book for any student of Reconstruction, the process of reconciliation or the years after the Civil War.--TOCWOC: A Civil War Blog, " Creating a Confederate Kentucky is a welcome addition to the study of post-Civil War Kentucky. . . . Those who teach the history of Kentucky and of the Civil War and Reconstruction will find this book a valuable addition to their reading lists."-- Journal of the Civil War Era, "Anne Marshall's Creating a Confederate Kentucky alters the entire field of Civil War memory study....[It] is a masterful work of scholarship. Its prose is lucid; its research is thorough; and its interpretative power is truly ground-breaking." -- Civil War Book Review, By enriching our understanding of the ways Confederate Kentuckians, white Unionists, and African Americans interpreted the state's participation in the Civil War, Marshall also sheds significant light on the processes through which competing interests claim ownership of history.-- The Journal of American History
IllustratedYes
SynopsisMarshall traces the development of a Confederate identity in Kentucky between 1865 and 1925 that belied the fact that Kentucky never left the Union and that more Kentuckians fought for the North than for the South. Following the Civil War, the people of Kentucky appeared to forget their Union loyalties, embracing the Democratic politics, racial violence, and Jim Crow laws associated with formerly Confederate states., In Creating a Confederate Kentucky , Anne E. Marshall traces the development of a Confederate identity in Kentucky between 1865 and 1925, belying the fact that Kentucky never left the Union. After the Civil War, the people of Kentucky appeared to forget their Union loyalties and embraced the Democratic politics, racial violence, and Jim Crow laws associated with former Confederate states. Marshall looks beyond postwar political and economic factors to the longer-term commemorations of the Civil War by which Kentuckians fixed the state's remembrance of the conflict for the following sixty years.
LC Classification NumberE509.M37 2010