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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
The Heart Of American History (Book Review), Edward L. Ayers
The Heart Of American History (Book Review), Edward L. Ayers
History Faculty Publications
Review of the book, The Heart of American History by James McPherson. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1989.
The era of the Civil War and Reconstruction remains the crucible of American history, the trial that decisively defined this country and its self-perceived mission. The American people seem to recognize that fact, for no era in our history attracts the general reading public as does that between 1861 and 1877.
Half A Memory : The Vietnam War In The American Mind, 1975-1985, Mark W. Jackley
Half A Memory : The Vietnam War In The American Mind, 1975-1985, Mark W. Jackley
Master's Theses
This study attempts to show how Americans in general remembered the Vietnam War from 1975 to 1985, the decade after it ended. A kind of social history, the study concentrates on the war as remembered in the popular realm, examining novels as well as nonfiction, poetry, plays, movies, articles in political journals, songs, memorials, public opinion polls and more. Most everything but academic history is discussed. The study notes how the war's political history was not much remembered; the warrior, not the war, became the focus of national memory. The study argues that personal memory predominated over political memory for …
Prisons, Edward L. Ayers
Prisons, Edward L. Ayers
History Faculty Publications
American penitentiaries developed in two distinct phases, and southern states participated in both. Virginia, Kentucky, Maryland, and Georgia built prisons before 1820, and between 1829 and 1842 new or newly reorganized institutions were established in Maryland, Tennessee, Georgia, Louisiana, Missouri, Mississippi, and Alabama. Only the Carolinas and Florida resisted the penitentiary before the Civil War.
Honor, Edward L. Ayers
Honor, Edward L. Ayers
History Faculty Publications
Southerners of the antebellum era made it clear that they subscribed to an ethic of honor, but they never specified exactly what honor meant. In large part, this was because the meaning of honor depended on its immediate context, on who claimed and who acknowledged it.