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Stepdaughters of History - Southern Women and the American Civil War (Paperback)
Loot Price: R580
Discovery Miles 5 800
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Stepdaughters of History - Southern Women and the American Civil War (Paperback)
Series: Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History
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List price R643
Loot Price R580
Discovery Miles 5 800
You Save R63 (10%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In Stepdaughters of History, noted scholar Catherine Clinton
reflects on the roles of women as historical actors within the
field of Civil War studies and examines the ways in which
historians have redefined female wartime participation. Clinton
contends that despite the recent attention, white and black women's
contributions remain shrouded in myth and sidelined in traditional
historical narratives. Her work tackles some of these well-worn
assumptions, dismantling prevailing attitudes that consign women to
the footnotes of Civil War texts. Clinton highlights some of the
debates, led by emerging and established Civil War scholars, which
seek to demolish demeaning and limiting stereotypes of southern
women as simpering belles, stoic Mammies, Rebel spitfires, or
sultry spies. Such caricatures mask the more concrete and
compelling struggles within the Confederacy, and in Clinton's
telling, a far more balanced and vivid understanding of women's
roles within the wartime South emerges. New historical evidence has
given rise to fresh insights, including important revisionist
literature on women's overt and covert participation in activities
designed to challenge the rebellion and on white women's roles in
reshaping the war's legacy in postwar narratives. Increasingly,
Civil War scholarship integrates those women who defied gender
conventions to assume men's roles-including those few who gained
notoriety as spies, scouts, or soldiers during the war. As
Clinton's work demonstrates, the larger questions of women's
wartime contributions remain important correctives to our
understanding of the war's impact. Through a fuller appreciation of
the dynamics of sex and race, Stepdaughters of History promises a
broader conversation in the twenty-first century, inviting readers
to continue to confront the conundrums of the American Civil War.
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