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- The Journal of the Civil War Era
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Review
- Tasting Freedom: Octavius Catto and the Battle for Equality in Civil War America (review) Volume 2, Number 3, September 2012, pp. 459-460
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $24.00 USD.
This issue contains 24 articles in total
- Contributors
- Books Received
- American Oracle: The Civil War in the Civil Rights Era (review)
- The Color of the Land: Race, Nation, and the Politics of Landownership in Oklahoma, 1832–1929 (review)
- Articulating Rights: Nineteenth-Century American Women on Race, Reform, and the State (review)
- Undaunted Radical: The Selected Writings and Speeches of Albion W. Tourgée (review)
- The Promises of Liberty: The History and Contemporary Relevance of the Thirteenth Amendment (review)
- Tasting Freedom: Octavius Catto and the Battle for Equality in Civil War America (review)
- Shooting Soldiers: Civil War Medical Photography by R. B. Bontecou, and: Doctored: The Medicine of Photography in Nineteenth-Century America (review)
- Last to Leave the Field: The Life and Letters of First Sergeant Ambrose Henry Hayward, 28th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry (review)
- Border War: Fighting over Slavery before the Civil War (review)
- Civil War Citizens: Race, Ethnicity, and Identity in America’s Bloodiest Conflict (review)
- War No More: The Antiwar Impulse in American Literature, 1861–1914 (review)
- Lincoln and the Triumph of the Nation: Constitutional Conflict in the American Civil War (review)
- Secession as an International Phenomenon: From America’s Civil War to Contemporary Separatist Movements (review)
- Evangelicalism and the Politics of Reform in Northern Black Thought, 1776–1863 (review)
- Born Southern: Childbirth, Motherhood, and Social Networks in the Old South (review)
- On the Make: Clerks and the Quest for Capital in Nineteenth-Century America (review)
- Reading the Sesquicentennial: New Directions in the Popular History of the Civil War
- “I Yield to No Man an Iota of My Convictions”: Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park and the Limits of Reconciliation
- “Only Murder Makes Men”: Reconsidering the Black Military Experience
- The North American Crisis of the 1860s
- “I Only Knew What Was in My Mind”: Ulysses S. Grant and the Meaning of Appomattox
- Editor’s Note
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