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The Civil War as a Crisis in Gender Augusta, Georgia, 1860-1890 [Paperback]

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  • Category: Books (Social Science)
  • Author:  Whites, LeeAnn
  • Author:  Whites, LeeAnn
  • ISBN-10:  0820322091
  • ISBN-10:  0820322091
  • ISBN-13:  9780820322094
  • ISBN-13:  9780820322094
  • Publisher:  University of Georgia Press
  • Publisher:  University of Georgia Press
  • Pages:  288
  • Pages:  288
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2000
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2000
  • SKU:  0820322091-11-MPOD
  • SKU:  0820322091-11-MPOD
  • Item ID: 100272874
  • Seller: ShopSpell
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  • Delivery by: May 18 to May 20
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LEEANN WHITES is the editor of Ohio Valley History and professor emerita of history at the University of Missouri. She is the author of The Civil War as a Crisis in Gender (Georgia) and Gender Matters: Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Making of the New South and coeditor of Occupied Women: Gender, Military Occupation, and the American Civil War and Women in Missouri History: In Search of Power and Influence.

Gender is the last vantage point from which the Civil War has yet to be examined in-depth, says LeeAnn Whites. Gender concepts and constructions, Whites says, deeply influenced the beliefs underpinning both the Confederacy and its vestiges to which white southerners clung for decades after the Confederacy's defeat. Whites's arguments and observations, which center on the effects of the conflict on the South's gender hierarchy, will challenge our understanding of the war and our acceptance of its historiography.

The ordering principle of gender roles and relations in the antebellum South, says Whites, was a form of privileged white male identity against which others in that society were measured and accorded worth and meaning—women, wives, children, and slaves. Over the course of the Civil War the power of these men to so arbitrarily construct their world all but vanished, owing to a succession of hardships that culminated in defeat and the end of slavery. At the same time, Confederate women were steadily—and ambivalently—empowered. Drawn out of their domestic sphere, these women labored and sacrificed to prop up an apparently hollow notion of essential manliness that rested in part on an assumption of female docility and weakness.

Whites focuses on Augusta, Georgia, to follow these events as they were played out in the lives of actual men and women. An antebellum lC.

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