What This Cruel War Was Over Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

What This Cruel War Was Over Book

A vivid, unprecedented account of why Union and Confederate soldiers identified slavery as the root of the war, how the conflict changed troopsâ?? ideas about slavery, and what those changing ideas meant for the war and the nation.Using soldiersâ?? letters, diaries, and regimental newspapers, Chandra Manning allows us to accompany soldiersâ??black and white, northern and southernâ??into camps and hospitals and on marches and battlefields to better understand their thoughts about what they were doing and why. Manningâ??s work reveals that Union soldiers, though evincing little sympathy for abolitionism before the war, were calling for emancipation by the second half of 1861, ahead of civilians, political leaders, and officers, and a full year before the Emancipation Proclamation. She recognizes Confederate soldiersâ?? primary focus on their own families, and explores how their beliefs about abolitionâ??that it would endanger their loved ones, erase the privileges of white manhood, and destroy the very fabric of southern societyâ??motivated even non-slaveholding Confederates to fight and compelled them to persevere through military catastrophes like Gettysburg and Atlanta, long after they grew to despise the Confederate government and disdain the southern citizenry. She makes clear that while white Union troops viewed preservation of the Union as essential to the legacy of the Revolution, over the course of the war many also came to think that in order to gain Godâ??s favor, they and other white northerners must confront the racial prejudices that made them complicit in the sin of slavery. We see how the eventual consideration of the enlistment of black soldiers by the Confederacy eliminated any reason for many Confederate soldiers to fight; how, by 1865, black Union soldiers believed the forward racial strides made during the war would continue; and how white Union troopsâ?? commitment to racial change, fluctuating with the progress of the war, created undreamt-of potential for change but failed to fulfill it.An important and eye-opening addition to our understanding of the Civil War.Read More

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  • 0307264823
  • 9780307264824
  • Chandra Manning
  • 1 April 2007
  • Potter Style
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 368
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