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This cutting-edge edited volume provides theoretically and
descriptively rich analysis of cases and contexts where race
factors strongly in black health outcomes and dynamics, viewing
these matters from various disciplinary and national vantage
points. It delineates analysis and action that wrestle with the
multi-dimensional nature of black wellness and with ways broad
public resources and black religious resources should be mobilized
and leveraged to ensure collective black wellness.
Published to mark the Civil War sesquicentennial, The Yellowhammer
War collects new essays on Alabama's role in, and experience of,
the bloody national conflict and its aftermath. During the first
winter of the war, Confederate soldiers derided the men of an
Alabama Confederate unit for their yellow-trimmed uniforms that
allegedly resembled the plumage of the yellow-shafted flicker or
"yellowhammer" (now the Northern Flicker, Colaptes auratus, and the
state bird of Alabama). The soldiers' nickname, "Yellowhammers,"
came from this epithet. After the war, Alabama veterans proudly
wore yellowhammer feathers in their hats or lapels when attending
reunions. Celebrations throughout the state have often expanded on
that pageantry and glorified the figures, events, and battles of
the Civil War with sometimes dubious attention to historical fact
and little awareness of those who supported, resisted, or tolerated
the war off the battlefield. Many books about Alabama's role in the
Civil War have focused serious attention on the military and
political history of the war. The Yellowhammer War likewise
examines the military and political history of Alabama's Civil War
contributions, but it also covers areas of study usually neglected
by centennial scholars, such as race, women, the home front, and
Reconstruction. From Patricia A. Hoskins's look at Jews in Alabama
during the Civil War and Jennifer Ann Newman Treviño's examination
of white women's attitudes during secession to Harriet E. Amos
Doss's study of the reaction of Alabamians to Lincoln's
Assassination and Jason J. Battles's essay on the Freedman's
Bureau, readers are treated to a broader canvas of topics on the
Civil War and the state. CONTRIBUTORS Jason J. Battles / Lonnie A.
Burnett / Harriet E. Amos Doss / Bertis English / Michael W.
Fitzgerald / Jennifer Lynn Gross / Patricia A. Hoskins / Kenneth W.
Noe / Victoria E. Ott / Terry L. Seip / Ben H. Severance /
Kristopher A. Teters / Jennifer Ann Newman Treviño / Sarah
Woolfolk Wiggins / Brian Steel Wills Published in Cooperation with
the Frances S. Summersell Center for the Study of the South
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