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Love and Duty - Confederate Widows and the Emotional Politics of Loss (Paperback)
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Love and Duty - Confederate Widows and the Emotional Politics of Loss (Paperback)
Series: Civil War America
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Between 1861 and 1865, approximately 200,000 women were widowed by
the deaths of Civil War soldiers. They recorded their experiences
in diaries, letters, scrapbooks, and pension applications. In Love
and Duty, Angela Esco Elder draws on these materials—as well as
songs, literary works, and material objects like mourning
gowns—to explore white Confederate widows' stories, examining the
records of their courtships, marriages, loves, and losses to
understand their complicated relationship with the Confederate
state. Elder shows how, in losing their husbands, many women
acquired significant cultural capital, which positioned them as
unlikely actors to gain political influence. Confederate
officialdom championed a particular image of white widowhood the
young wife who selflessly transferred her monogamous love from her
dead husband to the deathless cause for which he'd fought. But a
closer look reveals that these women spent their new cultural
capital with great shrewdness and variety. Not only were they aware
of the social status gained in widowhood they also used that status
on their own terms, turning mourning into a highly politicized act
amid the battle to establish the Confederacy's legitimacy. Death
forced all Confederate widows to reconstruct their lives, but only
some would choose to play a role in reconstructing the nation.
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