The Women's Fight: The Civil War's Battles for Home, Freedom, and Nation

The Women's Fight: The Civil War's Battles for Home, Freedom, and Nation

by Thavolia Glymph
The Women's Fight: The Civil War's Battles for Home, Freedom, and Nation

The Women's Fight: The Civil War's Battles for Home, Freedom, and Nation

by Thavolia Glymph

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Overview

Historians of the Civil War often speak of "wars within a war"—the military fight, wartime struggles on the home front, and the political and moral battle to preserve the Union and end slavery. In this broadly conceived book, Thavolia Glymph provides a comprehensive new history of women's roles and lives in the Civil War—North and South, white and black, slave and free—showing how women were essentially and fully engaged in all three arenas. Glymph focuses on the ideas and ideologies that drove women's actions, allegiances, and politics. We encounter women as they stood their ground, moved into each other's territory, sought and found common ground, and fought for vastly different principles. Some women used all the tools and powers they could muster to prevent the radical transformations the war increasingly imposed, some fought with equal might for the same transformations, and other women fought simply to keep the war at bay as they waited for their husbands and sons to return home.

Glymph shows how the Civil War exposed as never before the nation's fault lines, not just along race and class lines but also along the ragged boundaries of gender. However, Glymph makes clear that women's experiences were not new to the mid-nineteenth century; rather, many of them drew on memories of previous conflicts, like the American Revolution and the War of 1812, to make sense of the Civil War's disorder and death.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781469672502
Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
Publication date: 08/01/2022
Series: Littlefield History of the Civil War Era
Pages: 392
Sales rank: 217,789
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Thavolia Glymph is Peabody Family Distinguished Professor of History and Professor of Law at Duke University and author of Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

In the burgeoning literature on women and the Civil War, The Women's Fight is unique both because of the scope of its argument and the depth of its research. Glymph not only describes how the war affected women of all kinds but also examines their interactions with one another across boundaries of race, region, and class. The result is a fascinating and illuminating account that sheds important new light on America's greatest crisis."—Eric Foner, author of The Second Founding: How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution

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