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Old 10-25-2016, 04:46 PM   #1
ColdF0rest
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Searching for books that deal with the American South,especially Civil War

Good evening everyone!

Im currently working on my seminar paper for school and I would like to have some book recommendations that could help me out.

Im basically searching for books that deal with the time after Civil War in the south ( time of reconstruction ) and any affects on our today's society

Example : The book "Still fighting the civil war - the American south and southern history" by David Goldfield ( which I´ve already read and is a great book ) deals with the role of a woman.After civil war they started to move away from their cooking wife role and started to become independent as well as moving into political jobs that were once only occupied by men.And because of that we might be able to see the first American female president ever.

Please excuse any grammar/spelling mistakes
Greetings from Germany
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Old 10-25-2016, 04:59 PM   #2
AnemicOak
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I haven't read this, but another forum member mention it in a recent thread as one he liked...

The Fall of the House of Dixie: The Civil War and the Social Revolution That Transformed the South by Bruce Levine
Quote:
In this major new history of the Civil War, Bruce Levine tells the riveting story of how that conflict upended the economic, political, and social life of the old South, utterly destroying the Confederacy and the society it represented and defended. Told through the words of the people who lived it, The Fall of the House of Dixie illuminates the way a war undertaken to preserve the status quo became a second American Revolution whose impact on the country was as strong and lasting as that of our first.

In 1860 the American South was a vast, wealthy, imposing region where a small minority had amassed great political power and enormous fortunes through a system of forced labor. The South’s large population of slaveless whites almost universally supported the basic interests of plantation owners, despite the huge wealth gap that separated them. By the end of 1865 these structures of wealth and power had been shattered. Millions of black people had gained their freedom, many poorer whites had ceased following their wealthy neighbors, and plantation owners were brought to their knees, losing not only their slaves but their political power, their worldview, their very way of life. This sea change was felt nationwide, as the balance of power in Congress, the judiciary, and the presidency shifted dramatically and lastingly toward the North, and the country embarked on a course toward equal rights.

Levine captures the many-sided human drama of this story using a huge trove of diaries, letters, newspaper articles, government documents, and more. In The Fall of the House of Dixie, the true stakes of the Civil War become clearer than ever before, as slaves battle for their freedom in the face of brutal reprisals; Abraham Lincoln and his party turn what began as a limited war for the Union into a crusade against slavery by issuing the Emancipation Proclamation; poor southern whites grow increasingly disillusioned with fighting what they have come to see as the plantation owners’ war; and the slave owners grow ever more desperate as their beloved social order is destroyed, not just by the Union Army, but also from within. When the smoke clears, not only Dixie but all of American society is changed forever.

Brilliantly argued and engrossing, The Fall of the House of Dixie is a sweeping account of the destruction of the old South during the Civil War, offering a fresh perspective on the most colossal struggle in our history and the new world it brought into being.
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