Upon the Fields of Battle: Essays on the Military History of America's Civil War

Upon the Fields of Battle: Essays on the Military History of America's Civil War

Upon the Fields of Battle: Essays on the Military History of America's Civil War

Upon the Fields of Battle: Essays on the Military History of America's Civil War

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Overview

New developments in Civil War scholarship owe much to removal of artificial divides by historians seeking to explore the connections between the home front and the battlefield. Indeed, scholars taking a holistic view of the war have contributed to our understanding of the social complexities of emancipation—of freedom in a white republic—and the multifaceted experiences of both civilians and soldiers. Given these accomplishments, research focusing on military history prompts prominent and recurring debates among Civil War historians. Critics of traditional military history see it as old-fashioned, too technical, or irrelevant to the most important aspects of the war. Proponents of this area of study view these criticisms as a misreading of its nature and potential to illuminate the war. The collected essays in Upon the Fields of Battle bridge this intellectual divide, demonstrating how historians enrich Civil War studies by approaching the period through the specific but nonetheless expansive lens of military history.

Drawing together contributions from Keith Altavilla, Robert L. Glaze, John J. Hennessy, Earl J. Hess, Brian Matthew Jordan, Kevin M. Levin, Brian D. McKnight, Jennifer M. Murray, and Kenneth W. Noe, editors Andrew S. Bledsoe and Andrew F. Lang present an innovative volume that deeply integrates and analyzes the ideas and practices of the military during the Civil War. Furthermore, by grounding this collection in both traditional and pioneering methodologies, the authors assess the impact of this field within the social, political, and cultural contexts of Civil War studies.

Upon the Fields of Battle reconceives traditional approaches to subjects like battles and battlefields, practice and policy, command and culture, the environment, the home front, civilians and combatants, atrocity and memory, revealing a more balanced understanding of the military aspects of the Civil War’s evolving history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807169773
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press
Publication date: 11/07/2018
Series: Conflicting Worlds: New Dimensions of the American Civil War
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Andrew S. Bledsoe, assistant professor of history at Lee University, is the author of Citizen-Officers: The Union and Confederate Volunteer Junior Officer Corps in the American Civil War.

Andrew F. Lang, assistant professor of history at Mississippi State University, is the author of In the Wake of War: Military Occupation, Emancipation, and Civil War America.

Read an Excerpt

Contents
Foreword: Gary W. Gallagher

I. Considerations

Military History and the American Civil War
Andrew S. Bledsoe and Andrew F. Lang

Rejuvenating Traditional Military History in the Current Age of Civil War Studies
Earl J. Hess

II. The Contested Battlefield

“I am Completely Checked by the Weather”: George B. McClellan, Weather, and the Peninsula
Campaign
Kenneth W. Noe

“Such Then Is The Decision”: George Gordon Meade, the Expectations of Decisive Battle, and the Road to Williamsport
Jennifer M. Murray

“The Farce Was Complete”: Braxton Bragg, Field Orders, and the Language of
Command at McLemore’s Cove
Andrew S. Bledsoe

The Looting and Bombardment of Fredericksburg: “Vile Spirits” or War Transformed?
John J. Hennessy

Guerrilla Warfare as Social Stimulus
Brian D. McKnight

III. The Soldiers’ War

The Problem of American Exceptionalism: Military Occupation, Emancipation, and the Preservation of Union
Andrew F. Lang

“They Met Their Fate Without a Sigh”: An Analysis of Confederate Military Executions
Kevin M. Levin

McClellan's Men: Union Army Democrats in 1864
Keith Altavilla

The Hour That Lasted Fifty Years: The 107th Ohio and The Human Longitude of Gettysburg
Brian Matthew Jordan

“His death may have lost the South her independence”: Albert Sidney Johnston and Civil War
Memory
Robert L. Glaze

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