[Last
October I had a lot of fun sharing and AmericanStudying some of my recent
reads, and it brought out great responses and nominations for a crowd-sourced
weekend post. So this year I wanted to do the same, and would love to hear
what you’ve been reading for another weekend list!]
On three great
books that reflect the breadth of contemporary Civil War scholarship (along
with Adam
Domby’s The False Cause, on which
more as part of next week’s series).
1)
Searching
for Black Confederates (2019): I’ve been writing
about Kevin Levin for nearly the whole of this
blog’s history, and with good reason: his blog Civil War Memory was and remains one of the
most potent inspirations for own public scholarly blogging. But while I’m thus
clearly a fan of all of Levin’s work, I would say without qualification that Searching is his best work to date, a
deeply researched, convincingly argued, compellingly written investigation into
and dismantling of what he calls in his subtitle The Civil War’s Most Persistent Myth. This is public scholarly
writing at its finest, and the best argument for the evolving field of Civil
War memory studies that I can imagine.
2)
How
the South Won the Civil War (2020): I honestly didn’t plan for this
post to be an acknowledgments for my own online writing, but I have to be
honest, historian
Heather Cox Richardson (and especially her wonderful We’re History website) has been another hugely influential figure in
the evolution of my public scholarly work and identity. Richardson’s own public
scholarly profile has exploded this year, thanks to her hugely popular, nightly
“Letters from an American”
posts. But to my mind her best work this year, and quite possibly the best
work of her very distinguished career to date, is How the South Won the Civil War—a book that is partly about the
post-Civil War West, partly about 20th
and 21st century white supremacy, and entirely an example of how
the best Civil War scholarship is both revelatory about the Civil War and
profoundly relevant to our own moment.
3)
Dr.
Mary Walker’s Civil War (2020): While both of those books are about the
Civil War’s aftermaths, legacies, and memories at least as much as the war
itself, it’s important to note that there is (as there will always be) still a
place for scholarly writing focused centrally on wartime histories and stories.
The best such book I read this year is this one, by recently retired history
professor (and my longtime Twitter friend) Theresa Kaminski. Kaminski has
been writing about what she calls “fascinating, scrappy women” for many books
and projects now, and Walker is a great example: a Civil War physician who
became the only
woman to receive the Medal of Honor, and a lifelong women’s rights activist
to boot. I could tell you more, but Kaminski tells it better than I could—so check
out this great book, and all three of these models of Civil War scholarship!
Last recent read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Recent reads you’d share for the weekend post?
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