As Cody Marrs observes in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Long Civil War, the Civil War functions as a dividing line that organizes our field through literary histories, course structure, anthologies, hiring practices, and so on. And yet the literature of the war itself has traditionally been marginalized by period constructs such as the American Renaissance, transcendentalism, or realism—and by more recent critiques that maintain the ante- and post- division. This marginalization was theorized by Daniel Aaron’s The Unwritten War (1972), which posited a grand federal epic that never got written as writers in the North and South failed to respond substantially to the war’s meaning. Perhaps this marginalization is why Civil War literary studies have been especially amenable to interdisciplinary, expanded-canon, or multimedia approaches. The four books under review here are but a sampling of the field’s multivalent expansion since the sesquicentennial. Each suggests questions regarding the canon,...
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Book Review|
September 01 2017
Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Long Civil War
Belligerent Muse: Five Northern Writers and How They Shaped Our Understanding of the Civil War
Defining Duty in the Civil War: Personal Choice, Popular Culture, and the Union Home Front
Civil War Nurse Narratives, 1863–1870
Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Long Civil War
. By Marrs, Cody. Cambridge
: Cambridge Univ. Press
. 2015
. xii, 192 pp. Cloth
, $103.00; e-book, $82.00.Belligerent Muse: Five Northern Writers and How They Shaped Our Understanding of the Civil War
. By Cushman, Stephen. Chapel Hill
: Univ. of North Carolina Press
. 2014
. xiii, 213 pp. Cloth
, $28.00; paper, $22.00; e-book, $27.99.Defining Duty in the Civil War: Personal Choice, Popular Culture, and the Union Home Front
. By Gallman, J. Matthew. Chapel Hill
: Univ. of North Carolina Press
. 2015
. 327 pp. Cloth
, $45.00; paper, $29.95; e-book, $44.99.Civil War Nurse Narratives, 1863–1870
. By Wardrop, Daneen. 274 pp
. Iowa City
: Univ. of Iowa Press
. 2015
. 267 pp. Paper
, $55.00; e-book, $55.00.
Timothy Sweet
Timothy Sweet
Timothy Sweet is Eberly Family Professor of American Literature at West Virginia University. His publications on the Civil War include Traces of War (Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1990) and an edited collection, Literary Cultures of the Civil War (Univ. of Georgia Press, 2016).
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American Literature (2017) 89 (3): 630–633.
Citation
Timothy Sweet; Nineteenth-Century American Literature and the Long Civil War
Belligerent Muse: Five Northern Writers and How They Shaped Our Understanding of the Civil War
Defining Duty in the Civil War: Personal Choice, Popular Culture, and the Union Home Front
Civil War Nurse Narratives, 1863–1870. American Literature 1 September 2017; 89 (3): 630–633. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4160930
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