With over two hundred photographs and related documents the authors make indelibly real the physical and spiritual suffering of the ordinary soldier and his love for his country and its land. By carefully matching available written sources to photographs, the authors have created a unique opportunity for the reader to see the war on a human scale that may always elude traditional narratives. - Back cover.
Bearss, Edwin C. and Grabau, Warren. The Battle of Jackson, and Bearss, Edwin C. The Siege of Jackson. Baltimore: Gateway Press, 1981. Brown, D. Alexander. "Grierson's Raid," Civil War Times Illustrated, III ( January 1965): 4-32.
BENJAMIN M. Palmer copy print Politicians were not alone in their strident support of secession following Lincoln's election . Ministers like B. M. Palmer , pastor of the First Presbyterian church in New Orleans , became leaders of ...
Boston : Little , Brown , 1998 . Turner , William A. Even More Confederate Faces . Orange , Va . ... Hoobler , James A. Nashville : From the Collection of Carl and Otto Giers . 2 vols . Charleston , S.C .: Arcadia , 1999–2000 .
From the first Georgians to march north to fight under Robert E. Lee, through the Battle of Chickamauga, the Atlanta Campaign, the March to the Sea, and the awful conditions...
With over 240 photographs, maps, and related documents, McCaslin details the physical and spiritual suffering of the ordinary recruit in his fight for his country, its land, and his family's way of life.
-- 1994 Certificate of Commendation, American Association for State and Local History
is to give them (back) a political capacity to inform, critique, and mobilize; to set in motion a complex, ... Chapter 1 engages with images of mourning women on both sides of the US–Iraq conflict, arguing that this trope is deeply ...
Chronicles the Civil War using photographs taken by Mathew Brady and his employees.
"More than 480 images illustrate the relationship between photography and war, showing the experience of armed conflict through the eyes of photographers across two centuries and six continents"--
In viewing the Great War through the portraits of those involved, Paul Moorhouse looks at the bitter-sweet nature of a conflict in which valour and selfless endeavour were qualified by disaster and suffering, and examines the notion of ...