(Source: LSU Press)
Louisiana State University Press published a book last year that deals with the US civil war and American
citizenship.
ABOUT THE BOOK
The meanings and practices of
American citizenship were as contested during the Civil War era as they are
today. By examining a variety of perspectives—from prominent lawmakers in
Washington, D.C., to enslaved women, from black firemen in southern cities to
Confederate émigrés in Latin America—The Civil War and the Transformation of
American Citizenship offers a wide-ranging exploration of
citizenship’s metamorphoses amid the extended crises of war and emancipation.
Americans in the antebellum era considered citizenship, at its most basic level, as a legal status acquired through birth or naturalization, and one that offered certain rights in exchange for specific obligations. Yet throughout the Civil War period, the boundaries and consequences of what it meant to be a citizen remained in flux. At the beginning of the war, Confederates relinquished their status as U.S. citizens, only to be mostly reabsorbed as full American citizens in its aftermath. The Reconstruction years also saw African American men acquire—at least in theory—the core rights of citizenship. As these changes swept across the nation, Americans debated the parameters of citizenship, the possibility of adopting or rejecting citizenship at will, and the relative importance of political privileges, economic opportunity, and cultural belonging. Ongoing inequities between races and genders, over the course of the Civil War and in the years that followed, further shaped these contentious debates.
Americans in the antebellum era considered citizenship, at its most basic level, as a legal status acquired through birth or naturalization, and one that offered certain rights in exchange for specific obligations. Yet throughout the Civil War period, the boundaries and consequences of what it meant to be a citizen remained in flux. At the beginning of the war, Confederates relinquished their status as U.S. citizens, only to be mostly reabsorbed as full American citizens in its aftermath. The Reconstruction years also saw African American men acquire—at least in theory—the core rights of citizenship. As these changes swept across the nation, Americans debated the parameters of citizenship, the possibility of adopting or rejecting citizenship at will, and the relative importance of political privileges, economic opportunity, and cultural belonging. Ongoing inequities between races and genders, over the course of the Civil War and in the years that followed, further shaped these contentious debates.
The Civil War and the
Transformation of American Citizenship reveals how war, Emancipation,
and Reconstruction forced the country to rethink the concept of citizenship not
only in legal and constitutional terms but also within the context of the lives
of everyday Americans, from imprisoned Confederates to former slaves.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paul Quigley is James I.
Robertson, Jr., Associate Professor of Civil War Studies at Virginia Tech and
the author of Shifting Grounds: Nationalism and the American South,
1848–1865.
More info here
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