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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
- Editor's Introduction Special Issue: Race, Politics, and Justice: Selected Articles from the Journal of the Civil War Era,
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 22 articles in total
- A Different Forty Acres: Land, Kin, and Migration in the Late Nineteenth-Century West
- Following the Paths of the Civil War’s Refugees from Slavery
- White Supremacy, Settler Colonialism, and the Two Citizenships of the Fourteenth Amendment
- A Body of "Truly Scientific Work": The U.S. Sanitary Commission and the Elaboration of Race in the Civil War Era
- Filming Black Voices and Stories: Slavery on America's Screens
- "The K. K. Alphabet": Secret Communication and Coordination of the Reconstruction-Era Ku Klux Klan in the Carolinas
- "I'm a Radical Black Girl": Black Women Unionists and the Politics of Civil War History
- Pensions and Protest: Former Slaves and the Reconstructed American State
- The Strange Career of Judge Lynch: Why the Study of Lynching Needs to Be Refocused on the Mid-Nineteenth Century
- "On Behalf of His Race and the Lemmon Slaves": Louis Napoleon, Northern Black Legal Culture, and the Politics of Sectional Crisis
- Black Litigiousness and White Accountability: Free Blacks and the Rhetoric of Reputation in the Antebellum Natchez District
- “We Do Not Care Particularly about the Skating Rinks”: African American Challenges to Racial Discrimination in Places of Public Amusement in Nineteenth-Century Boston, Massachusetts
- Working for Citizenship in Civil War Contraband Camps
- Emancipation’s Encounters: The Meaning of Freedom from the Pages of Civil War Sketchbooks
- Rose’s War and the Gendered Politics of a Slave Insurgency in the Civil War
- Closing the "Floodgate of Impurity": Moral Reform, Antislavery, and Interracial Marriage in Antebellum Massachusetts
- “Only Murder Makes Men”: Reconsidering the Black Military Experience
- Slave Rebels and Abolitionists: The Black Atlantic and the Coming of the Civil War
- Executions, Justice, and Reconciliation in North Carolina's Western Piedmont, 1865-67
- "Her Claim for Pension Is Lawful and Just": Representing Black Union Widows in Late-Nineteenth Century North Carolina
- "We Are Men!": Frederick Douglass and the Fault Lines of Gendered Citizenship
- Editor's Introduction
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