A People at War: Civilians and Soldiers in America's Civil War, 1854-1877
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| 01-23-08 | 4 | 6\6 |
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For too many years, authors on the Civil War took "war" too narrowly, focusing almost exclusively on campaigns and battles. But within the last couple of decades, Civil War historians have started to appreciate the fact that "war" is a social phenomenon and ultimately can be understand only in a social, economic, religious, and geographical context that goes beyond the exclusively military one. This has encouraged a refreshing and illuminating move away from an emphasis on military commanders toward explorations of the lives of ordinary civilians and soldiers during the war years.
Nelson and Sheriff's A People at War is a very readable and informative exercise in this wider analysis of the Civil War. The authors look at the political and economic tensions in the decade leading up to the war, explore the evolution of the conflict into a hard war which eroded moral distinctions between combatants and noncombatants, examine the effects of combat on soldiers and civilians, outline the roles of liberated "contraband" in the outcome of the war (one of their more interesting claims in this regard is that McClellan self-handicapped by refusing to use blacks as spies or laborers), and briefly discuss the social effects of Reconstruction. The book's readability and scope make it an excellent introduction to the Civil War. It has a decent "Suggestions for Further Reading" section, and two appendices, a "Political Chronology" and a "Military Chronology" are useful resources even for readers who are already comfortable swimming in Civil War waters. one final word. An earlier reviewer of Nelson & Sheriff's A People at War criticizes it for relying heavily on secondary rather than primary texts. But this seems to me to miss the mark. Some history books make contributions by unveiling new sources and freshly discovered texts. Others make equally valuable contributions by taking fresh looks at material already mined, discerning patterns in it that have hitherto gone unnoticed, and then offering interpretations which provide new insights. Still others contribute by synthesizing a wealth of scattered information into a comprehensive picture. If I read A People at War correctly, it falls somewhere within the second and third categories. And it does an admirable job. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-09-24 11:11:17 EST)
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