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Ghosts of the Confederacy: Defeat, the Lost Cause and the Emergence of the New South, 1865-1913 |
List Price: $27.00
Your Price: $27.00 |
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Reviews |
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Rating:  Summary: How the South used the "Lost Cause" Review: Dr. Foster provides an intriguing account of how the "Lost Cause" mutated to fit people's perceptions and needs. Confederate sentiments started and were celebrated as a form of nationalism, and idea that pulled the South together after the War. As time wore on, the "Cause" became more commercial as people come from all over to attend veterans celebrations and to see the monuments that seemed to spring up in every Southern town and city. Veteran and other organizations used reunions as a means to raise money. After the turn of the century Southerners used the "Lost Cause" to set themselves apart from the rest of the country. The emergence of the New South grew out of this newfound sense of being special and different. Although Foster's writing can be dry, he provides a cogent argument that would benefit anyone interested in the South after the Civil War.
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