The Romance of Reunion: Northerners and the South, 1865-1900Univ of North Carolina Press, 2000 M11 9 - 272 páginas The reconciliation of North and South following the Civil War depended as much on cultural imagination as on the politics of Reconstruction. Drawing on a wide range of sources, Nina Silber documents the transformation from hostile sectionalism to sentimental reunion rhetoric. Northern culture created a notion of reconciliation that romanticized and feminized southern society. In tourist accounts, novels, minstrel shows, and popular magazines, northerners contributed to a mythic and nostalgic picture of the South that served to counter their anxieties regarding the breakdown of class and gender roles in Gilded Age America. Indeed, for many Yankees, the ultimate symbol of the reunion process, and one that served to reinforce Victorian values as well as northern hegemony, was the marriage of a northern man and a southern woman. Southern men also were represented as affirming traditional gender roles. As northern men wrestled with their nation's increasingly global and aggressive foreign policy, the military virtues extolled in Confederate legend became more admired than reviled. By the 1890s, concludes Silber, northern whites had accepted not only a newly resplendent image of Dixie but also a sentimentalized view of postwar reunion. |
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... metaphors and cultural images of reconciliation, and to northern images of the South, attempting to locate those images in the context of the political, social, and economic transformations that swept over American society in the Gilded ...
... metaphors and cultural images of reconciliation, and to northern images of the South, attempting to locate those images in the context of the political, social, and economic transformations that swept over American society in the Gilded ...
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... metaphor which shaped northern society's understanding of the relations between the sections in the postwar period. Indeed, it has become almost commonplace to talk of the northern “rape of the South” during the Civil War, of how the ...
... metaphor which shaped northern society's understanding of the relations between the sections in the postwar period. Indeed, it has become almost commonplace to talk of the northern “rape of the South” during the Civil War, of how the ...
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... metaphor for legitimizing political relationships, for making power arrangements seem basic and fundamental. Moreover, notions about gender have also frequently served as a gauge for such subjective concepts as “culture” and ...
... metaphor for legitimizing political relationships, for making power arrangements seem basic and fundamental. Moreover, notions about gender have also frequently served as a gauge for such subjective concepts as “culture” and ...
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... metaphor. Rather, in shaping their discourse in this way, they had drawn on the very different notions of gender which characterized the North and the South in the mid-nineteenth century. The symbolic, regional representations of gender ...
... metaphor. Rather, in shaping their discourse in this way, they had drawn on the very different notions of gender which characterized the North and the South in the mid-nineteenth century. The symbolic, regional representations of gender ...
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... metaphors in the postwar period. During the 1860s their depiction of the southern woman as the Union's prime enemy offered not only a metaphoric assault on the Confederacy, but also an explicit condemnation of southern womanhood, a ...
... metaphors in the postwar period. During the 1860s their depiction of the southern woman as the Union's prime enemy offered not only a metaphoric assault on the Confederacy, but also an explicit condemnation of southern womanhood, a ...
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