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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
- The Power of the Press: Defining Disloyalty at Old Capitol Prison Volume 10, Number 3, September 2020, pp. 319-343
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
- Contributors
- Books Received
- Civil War Monuments and the Militarization of America by Thomas J. Brown (review)
- Growing Up with the Country: Family, Race, and Nation after the Civil War by Kendra Taira Field (review)
- Equality: An American Dilemma, 1866–1896 by Charles Postel (review)
- Stony the Road: Reconstruction, White Supremacy, and the Rise of Jim Crow by Henry Louis Gates Jr. (review)
- The Impeachers: The Trial of Andrew Johnson and the Dream of a Just Nation by Brenda Wineapple (review)
- The Second American Revolution: The Civil War–Era Struggle over Cuba and the Rebirth of the American Republic by Gregory P. Downs (review)
- The Calculus of Violence: How Americans Fought the Civil War by Aaron Sheehan-Dean (review)
- New Perspectives on the Union War ed. by Gary W. Gallagher and Elizabeth R. Varon (review)
- Approaching Civil War and Southern History by William J. Cooper (review)
- Church in the Wild: Evangelicals in Antebellum America by Brett Malcolm Grainger (review)
- Single, White, Slaveholding Women in the Nineteenth-Century American South by Marie S. Molloy (review)
- Rethinking Rufus: Sexual Violations of Enslaved Men by Thomas A. Foster (review)
- Moral Contagion: Black Atlantic Sailors, Citizenship, and Diplomacy in Antebellum America by Michael A. Schoeppner (review)
- American Abolitionism: Its Direct Political Impact from Colonial Times into Reconstruction by Stanley Harrold (review)
- Surviving Genocide: Native Nations and the United States from the American Revolution to Bleeding Kansas by Jeffrey Ostler (review)
- Faith and Works: A Historiographical Review of Religion in the Civil War Era
- The Trials of Mary Booth and the Post–Civil War Incarceration of African American Children
- The Power of the Press: Defining Disloyalty at Old Capitol Prison
- “Blow Ye Trumpet, Blow”: The Idea of Jubilee in Slavery and Freedom
- Editors’ Note
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