Inside the Confederate Nation

Inside the Confederate Nation - Cover

Essays in Honor of Emory M. Thomas

edited by Lesley J. Gordon

edited by John C. Inscoe

Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War

400 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / 1 Halftone

ebook available

History / United States - Southern History

Hardcover / 9780807130995 / December 2005
Paperback / 9780807132319 / February 2007

In The Confederacy as a Revolutionary Experience (1970) and The Confederate Nation (1979), Emory Thomas redefined the field of Civil War history and reconceptualized the Confederacy as a unique entity fighting a war for survival. Inside the Confederate Nation honors his enormous contributions to the field with fresh interpretations of all aspects of Confederate life—nationalism and identity, family and gender, battlefront and home front, race, and postwar legacies and memories. Many of the volume's twenty essays focus on individuals, households, communities, and particular regions of the South, highlighting the sheer variety of circumstances southerners faced over the course of the war. Other chapters explore the public and private dilemmas faced by diplomats, policy makers, journalists, and soldiers within the new nation. All of the essays attempt to explain the place of southerners within the Confederacy, how they came to see themselves and others differently because of secession, and the disparities between their expectations and reality.

Lesley J. Gordon is the Charles G. Summersell Chair of Southern History at the University of Alabama and author of A Broken Regiment: The 16th Connecticut’s Civil War and General George E. Pickett in Life and Legend.

John C. Inscoe is the Albert B. Saye Professor of History and University Professor at the University of Georgia. His many books include Writing the South through the Self: Explorations in Southern Autobiography; Race, War, and Remembrance in the Appalachian South; and Mountain Masters: Slavery and the Sectional Crisis in Western North Carolina.

Found an Error? Tell us about it.

×