FIGHTING WITH THE PAST : how seventeenth-century history shaped the american civil war.
| Author/creator | SHEEHAN-DEAN, AARON |
| Format | Book |
| Publication Info | [Place of publication not identified] : UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA PR, 2025. |
| Description | 224 pages : illustrations (black and white) ; 24 cm. |
| Subjects |
| Series | The Steven and Janice Brose lectures in the Civil War era Steven and Janice Brose lectures in the Civil War era. ^A691688 |
| Contents | Introduction. Making Poetry from the Past -- Historical Thinking in the Nineteenth Century -- The Cultural Origins of the Civil War -- Legitimate and Illegitimate Rebellion -- Committing to Civil War -- The Language of War -- The Dangers of Despotism -- Ending Civil Wars -- The Meaning of the Civil War -- Conclusion. Past and Present. |
| Abstract | "Civil War Americans, like people today, used the past to understand and traverse their turbulent present. As Aaron Sheehan-Dean reveals in this fascinating work of comparative intellectual history, nineteenth-century Americans were especially conversant with narratives of the English Civil Wars of the 1600s. Northerners and Southerners alike drew from histories of the English past to make sense of their own conflict, interpreting the events of the past in drastically different ways. Confederates, for example, likened themselves to England's Royalists (also known as Cavaliers), hoping to preserve a social order built on hierarchy and claiming the right to resist what they perceived as radicals' assaults on tradition. Meanwhile, conservative Northerners painted President Lincoln as a tyrant in the mold of English Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell, while radical abolitionists drew inspiration from Cromwell and sought to rebuild the South asCromwell had attempted with Ireland. Surveying two centuries of history-making and everyday engagement with historical thought, Sheehan-Dean convincingly argues that history itself was a battlefront of the American Civil War, with narratives of the past exercising surprising agency in interpretations of the nineteenth-century present. Sheehan-Dean's surprising discoveries provide an entirely fresh perspective on the role of historical memory in the Civil War era and offer a broader meditation on the construction and uses of history itself"-- Provided by publisher. |
| Bibliography note | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
| Issued in other form | ebook version : 9781469690780 |
| ISBN | 1469690748 |
| ISBN | 9781469690742 |
| ISBN | 1469690756 |
| ISBN | 9781469690759 |
| ISBN | PDF ebook |
| Standard identifier# | CIPO000265750 |