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- Digital Price: $12.00 USD (All sales final)
- The Journal of the Civil War Era
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Article
- “Equal to Any Minstrel Concert I Ever Attended at Home”: Union Soldiers and Blackface Performance in the Civil War South Volume 4, Number 4, December 2014, pp. 509-532
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 23 articles in total
- Contributors
- Books Received
- Black Confederates Out of the Attic and Into the Mainstream
- A Massacre in Memphis: The Race Riot that Shook the Nation One Year after the Civil War by Stephen V. Ash (review)
- Freedom’s Frontier: California and the Struggle over Unfree Labor, Emancipation, and Reconstruction by Stacey L. Smith (review)
- The Civil War and the West: The Frontier Transformed by Carol L. Higham (review)
- Glorious War: The Civil War Adventures of George Armstrong Custer by Thom Hatch (review)
- Thomas Nast: The Father of Modern Political Cartoons by Fiona Deans Halloran (review)
- Junius and Albert’s Adventures in the Confederacy: A Civil War Odyssey by Peter Carlson (review)
- Irish Catholic Writers and the Invention of the American South by Bryan Giemza (review)
- The Green and the Gray: The Irish in the Confederate States of America by David T. Gleeson (review)
- Nature’s Civil War: Common Soldiers and the Environment in 1862 Virginia by Kathryn Shively Meier (review)
- Worth a Dozen Men: Women and Nursing in the Civil War South by Libra R. Hilde (review)
- Living a Big War in a Small Place: Spartanburg, South Carolina, during the Confederacy by Philip N. Racine (review)
- Blood and Daring: How Canada Fought the American Civil War and Forged a Nation by John Boyko (review)
- Black Slaves, Indian Masters: Slavery, Emancipation, and Citizenship in the Native American South by Barbara Krauthamer (review)
- Slavery’s Exiles: The Story of the American Maroons by Sylviane A. Diouf (review)
- The Problem of Democracy in the Age of Slavery: Garrisonian Abolitionists and Transatlantic Reform by W. Caleb McDaniel (review)
- Republicanism, Race, and Reconstruction: The Ethos of Military Occupation in Civil War America
- Evangelizing for Union, 1863: The Army of the Potomac, Its Enemies at Home, and a New Solidarity
- “Equal to Any Minstrel Concert I Ever Attended at Home”: Union Soldiers and Blackface Performance in the Civil War South
- Coming to Terms with Civil War Military History
- Editor’s Note
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