Battle
160 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:15 Feb 2024
ISBN:9780817361600
Hardcover
Release Date:09 May 2008
ISBN:9780817316228
CA$40.95 Back Order
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Battle

The Nature and Consequences of Civil War Combat

Edited by Kent Gramm
University of Alabama Press
A collection of essays that reveals the reality of war behind the pageantry of the American Civil War

“In our youth, our hearts were touched with fire,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes of his generation’s Civil War days. Through the ages, war stories have gleamed with romantic glory, and American memories of the cataclysmic Civil War inspire pageantry and poetry even today.

The essays in Battle form a corrective to such celebratory histories by examining the lethal realities of Civil War combat—Enlightenment science applied to the creation of weapons that maimed and killed, which far outpaced advances in diet, sanitation, and medical treatment. The book reveals that behind the drums and trumpets, sashes and swords, the armies of the Union and Confederacy alike were haunted by fear, pain, and death.

The collection includes an introduction and afterword by editor Kent Gramm, who also contributes an essay titled “Numbers” that reveals the war in statistics. Paul Fussell contributes a powerful essay titled “The Culture of War.” D. Scott Hartwig examines the face of battle at Gettysburg. Bruce A. Evans discusses medical technology in “Wounds, Death, and Medical Care in the Civil War.” Eric T. Dean challenges the meanings and consequences of combat in “The Awful Shock and Rage of Battle.” The collection is rounded out by Alan T. Nolan’s masterful review of the national consequences of battle and the resultant myth of the Confederacy’s Lost Cause.
'The breadth of the themes and variety of methodologies in this collection are to be applauded. These essays will likely appeal to anyone with an interest in the experiences of Civil War soldiers.' —The Journal of Southern History

'This book seeks to strip Civil War combat of any and all romanticization and lay the foundations for a more truthful— if darker—Civil War history on the bedrock of war: battle, killing, and wounding.' —The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society
Kent Gramm is Professor of English at Wheaton College, Illinois, and author of November: Lincoln’s Elegy at Gettysburg and Somebody’s Darling: Essays on the Civil War.
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