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This issue contains 23 articles in total

[ + ] Show Issue Contents
  1. Contributors
  2. Books Received
  3. Monuments to Absence: Cherokee Removal and the Contest over Southern Memory by Andrew Denson (review)
  4. Remembering Reconstruction: Struggles over the Meaning of America’s Most Turbulent Era ed. by Carole Emberton and Bruce E. Baker (review)
  5. Interpreting American History: Reconstruction ed. by John David Smith (review)
  6. Christianity and Race in the American South: A History by Paul Harvey (review)
  7. The Retreats of Reconstruction: Race, Leisure, and the Politics of Segregation at the New Jersey Shore, 1865–1920 by David E. Goldberg (review)
  8. Thunder at the Gates: The Black Civil War Regiments That Redeemed America by Douglas R. Egerton (review)
  9. Driven from Home: North Carolina’s Civil War Refugee Crisis by David Silkenat (review)
  10. The Guerrilla Hunters: Irregular Conflicts during the Civil War ed. by Brian D. McKnight and Barton A. Myers (review)
  11. Theater of a Separate War: The Civil War West of the Mississippi River, 1861–1865 by Thomas W. Cutrer (review)
  12. A More Civil War: How the Union Waged a Just War by D. H. Dilbeck (review)
  13. Six Encounters with Lincoln: A President Confronts Democracy and Its Demons by Elizabeth Brown Pryor (review)
  14. American Civil Wars: The United States, Latin America, Europe, and the Crisis of the 1860s ed. by Don H. Doyle (review)
  15. The Loyal West: Civil War and Reunion in Middle America by Matthew E. Stanley (review)
  16. Schooling in the Antebellum South: The Rise of Public and Private Education in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama by Sarah L. Hyde (review)
  17. The Price for Their Pound of Flesh: The Value of the Enslaved, from Womb to Grave, in the Building of a Nation by Daina Ramey Berry (review)
  18. Women, Gender, and the Boundaries of Reconstruction
  19. Putting Out the “Embers of This Resentment”: Anglo-American Relations and the Rewriting of the British Response to the American Civil War, 1914–1925
  20. How Watermelons Became Black: Emancipation and the Origins of a Racist Trope
  21. “A Perfect Nuisance”: Working-Class Women and Neighborhood Development in Civil War St. Louis
  22. Replacement Rebels: Confederate Substitution and the Issue of Citizenship
  23. Editor’s Note
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