Raising the White Flag


How Surrender Defined the American Civil War

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By David Silkenat
Imprint:
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Dimensions:
235 x 155 mm
Weight:
150 g
Pages:
368

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Description

David Silkenat is senior lecturer of American history at the University of Edinburgh.

"Raising the White Flag provides a fresh perspective on the Civil War that should keep readers turning its pages."--"The Journal of Americas Military Past" "A masterful analysis. . . . Silkenat offers an essential exploration of the complex process of surrender and how attitudes and perceptions of surrender changed during the four-year conflict."--American Nineteenth Century History "David Silkenat's dazzling new book is the first sustained treatment of surrender, a phenomenon that punctuated the Civil War from Fort Sumter to Appomattox and beyond. . . . Engaging, wide-ranging, and thoroughly original. . . . Prepare to revise your lecture notes."--Journal of Southern History "In the course of his excellent study, [Silkenat] marshals ample evidence to support what at first seems a contradictory proposition. While observing that the Civil War was the deadliest conflict in American history, he also notes that in no other American war did surrender happen so often."--North Carolina Historical Review "Silkenat's book is a welcome addition to Civil War historiography, as it converses with a thriving field on civilized warfare. Silkenat shows that while the war had horrifying episodes, soldiers and their commanders' desire to fight a civilized, humane war limited the conflict."--H-Net Reviews "Some 25 percent of Civil War soldiers surrendered at one time or another in the course of the war. Silkenat offers the first systematic study of this common Civil War experience."--CHOICE "The best parts of the book are the excellent descriptions of numerous surrenders that we have all heard of but few . . . know very much about."--Civil War News

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