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- Digital Price: $24.00 USD (All sales final)
- The Journal of the Civil War Era
- The University of North Carolina Press
- issue
- Volume 11, Number 2, June 2021
- Contributors
- Books Received
- “Ex Parte Milligan” Reconsidered: Race and Civil Liberties from the Lincoln Administration to the War on Terror ed. by Stewart L. Winger and Jonathan W. White (review)
- The War Went On: Reconsidering the Lives of Civil War Veterans ed. by Brian Matthew Jordan and Evan C. Rothera (review)
- Jefferson Davis, Napoleonic France, and the Nature of Confederate Ideology, 1815–1870 by Jeffrey Zvengrowski (review)
- The Three-Cornered War: The Union, the Confederacy, and Native Peoples in the Fight for the West by Megan Kate Nelson (review)
- Living by Inches: The Smells, Sounds, Tastes, and Feeling of Captivity in Civil War Prisons by Evan A. Kutzler (review)
- Bodies in Blue: Disability in the Civil War North by Sarah Handley-Cousins (review)
- Household War: How Americans Lived and Fought the Civil War ed. by Lisa Tendrich Frank and LeeAnn Whites (review)
- A Republic in the Ranks: Loyalty and Dissent in the Army of the Potomac by Zachery A. Fry (review)
- The Worst Passions of Human Nature: White Supremacy in the Civil War North by Paul D. Escott (review)
- Unfaithful: Love, Adultery, and Marriage Reform in Nineteenth-Century America by Carol Faulkner (review)
- Becoming Free, Becoming Black: Race, Freedom, and Law in Cuba, Virginia, and Louisiana by Alejandro de la Fuente and Ariela J. Gross (review)
- Remaking the Republic: Black Politics and the Creation of American Citizenship by Christopher James Bonner (review)
- Stolen: Five Free Boys Kidnapped into Slavery and Their Astonishing Odyssey Home by Richard Bell, and: Sweet Taste of Liberty: A True Story of Slavery and Restitution in America by W. Caleb McDaniel (review)
- The Underground Railroad and the Geography of Violence in Antebellum America by Robert H. Churchill (review)
- Writing the US Civil War Era into Nineteenth-Century World History
- “They Are Truly Marvelous Cats”: The Importance of Companion Animals to US Soldiers during the Civil War
- “Novices in Warfare”: Elmer E. Ellsworth and Militia Reform on the Eve of Civil War
- “Sustaining the Truth of the Bible”: Black Evangelical Abolitionism and the Transatlantic Politics of Orthodoxy
- Iconoclasm and the Monumental Presence of the Civil War
- Editor’s Note
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