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"Taking us far beyond a 'brothers'war,' LeeAnn Whites demonstrates the centrality of gendered behavior and discourse to the Civil War and Reconstruction. Whether discussing men's wartime rhetoric, women's contributions to the Myth of the Lost Cause, or racial terrorization in the post-bellum South, her analysis of gender and class as underlying factors in the creation of a racially-segregated New South is unparalleled. This collection of essays will stimulate lively debates among students of the Civil War and nineteenth-century South." - Victoria Bynum, author of The Free State of Jones: Mississippi's Longest Civil War
"In this superb collection of essays LeeAnn Whites illustrates just how much gender really does matter. Whites has a particular gift for the clever, evocative essay that forces the reader to examine evidence from new angles. Here she has strung together a series of small jewels, demonstrating how both the familiar and the unexplored are better understood when we pay attention to how gendershaped the story, and how the story shaped gender. Throughout the volume Whites guides the reader to new perspectives on the Civil War and the postwar south, showing how gender was not merely apart from, or subservient to, the familiar forces of race, lclass, and region, but was inextricably woven into the fabric of society. This book is both an important contribution to the scholarship on nineteenth-century America, and a valuable statement about the historian s craft." - J. Matthew Gallman, University of Florida, and author of Mastering Wartime: A Social History of Philadelphia During the Civil War and Anna Elizabeth Dickinson: A Life in Public