Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America's Culture of DeathCornell University Press, 2011 M03 15 - 264 páginas "Americans came to fight the Civil War in the midst of a wider cultural world that sent them messages about death that made it easier to kill and to be killed. They understood that death awaited all who were born and prized the ability to face death with a spirit of calm resignation. They believed that a heavenly eternity of transcendent beauty awaited them beyond the grave. They knew that their heroic achievements would be cherished forever by posterity. They grasped that death itself might be seen as artistically fascinating and even beautiful."—from Awaiting the Heavenly Country How much loss can a nation bear? An America in which 620,000 men die at each other's hands in a war at home is almost inconceivable to us now, yet in 1861 American mothers proudly watched their sons, husbands, and fathers go off to war, knowing they would likely be killed. Today, the death of a soldier in Iraq can become headline news; during the Civil War, sometimes families did not learn of their loved ones' deaths until long after the fact. Did antebellum Americans hold their lives so lightly, or was death so familiar to them that it did not bear avoiding? In Awaiting the Heavenly Country, Mark S. Schantz argues that American attitudes and ideas about death helped facilitate the war's tremendous carnage. Asserting that nineteenth-century attitudes toward death were firmly in place before the war began rather than arising from a sense of resignation after the losses became apparent, Schantz has written a fascinating and chilling narrative of how a society understood death and reckoned the magnitude of destruction it was willing to tolerate. Schantz addresses topics such as the pervasiveness of death in the culture of antebellum America; theological discourse and debate on the nature of heaven and the afterlife; the rural cemetery movement and the inheritance of the Greek revival; death as a major topic in American poetry; African American notions of death, slavery, and citizenship; and a treatment of the art of death—including memorial lithographs, postmortem photography and Rembrandt Peale's major exhibition painting The Court of Death. Awaiting the Heavenly Country is essential reading for anyone wanting a deeper understanding of the Civil War and the ways in which antebellum Americans comprehended death and the unimaginable bloodshed on the horizon. |
Dentro del libro
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... Soldier's Grave, 1862 176 21. Elizabeth Louisa Foust with her dead child on her lap, ca. 1853 183 22. Alexander Gardner, “A Burial Party, Cold Harbor, VA., April, 1865” 185 ILLUSTRATIONS XI 23. Alexander Gardner, “A Sharpshooter's Last ...
... of Rembrandt Peale's 1820 painting The Court of Death 197 30. Thomas C. Roche, “Dead Confederate Soldier in the Trenches of Fort Mahone, Petersburg, Virginia,” 1865 202 Acknowledgments Many people have made this book a pleasure to.
... soldiers themselves also contributed to the destruction. James M. McPherson insists that average soldiers on both sides of the conflict understood that the war was about competing conceptions of liberty.7 After an exhaustive study of ...
... soldiers of the Civil War era too far, we can suggest, at least, that ethereal assumptions about the nature of eternity can influence the nitty-gritty world of politics in this realm.11 This book unfolds as a series of interconnected ...
... soldiers marching to slow and solemn music.”22 In the 1850s, the American Sunday School Union published a tract entitled “Heaven” for children that featured a dialogue between a mother and a young child about to die. “Is it not dreadful ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America's Culture of Death Mark S. Schantz Vista previa limitada - 2011 |
Awaiting the Heavenly Country: The Civil War and America's Culture of Death Mark S. Schantz Vista previa limitada - 2013 |