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there was a true pacifist movement in the midst of the Civil War, it lacked a literary voice. A pure antiwar literature would come with changing warfare and changing wars. J. Matthew Gallman notes 1. Edmund Wilson, Patriotic Gore: Studies in the Literature of the American Civil War (1962; repr., New York: Norton, 1994), and Daniel Aaron, The Unwritten War: American Writers and the Civil War (New York: Knopf, 1973). j. matthew gallman, a professor of history at the University of Florida, edited A Tour of Reconstruction: Travel Letters of 1875, by Anna Dickinson (University Press of Kentucky, 2011). Civil War Citizens: Race, Ethnicity, and Identity in America's Bloodiest Conflict. Edited by Susannah J. Ural. (New York: New York University Press, 2010. Pp. 256. Cloth, $79.00; paper, $23.00.) Civil War Citizens is an edited collection of scholarly work on the involvement of various "outside groups" in the U.S. Civil War. Editor Susannah J. Ural includes contributions by authors who address the way the Civil War affected Irish and German Americans in the North and the South, Jews and Native Americans in the Confederate states, and African Americans in the North. At the center of the inquiries into these
The Journal of the Civil War Era – University of North Carolina Press
Published: Aug 29, 2012
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