The Inner Civil War: Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the UnionUniversity of Illinois Press, 1965 - 277 páginas 'The Inner Civil War', first published more than twenty-five years ago, is a classic that has influenced historians' views of the Civil War and American intellectual change in the nineteenth century. This edition includes a new preface in which the author demonstrates the continuing relevance of the work and updates its interpretations. |
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Página ix
... wrote the book , I would now define the essence of modernizing thought as a com- mitment to bureaucratic rationality . ) At times , the book may somewhat overemphasize the war experience itself as a cause of this transformation . What ...
... wrote the book , I would now define the essence of modernizing thought as a com- mitment to bureaucratic rationality . ) At times , the book may somewhat overemphasize the war experience itself as a cause of this transformation . What ...
Página x
... wrote consid- ered significant contributors to American thought , for the simple reason that I found them saying interesting and revealing things about the meaning of the crisis , playing important roles in organizing and motivating the ...
... wrote consid- ered significant contributors to American thought , for the simple reason that I found them saying interesting and revealing things about the meaning of the crisis , playing important roles in organizing and motivating the ...
Página 1
... wrote Henry James in his life of Hawthorne . Writing , as he was , fourteen years after Appomattox , James could not fail to be aware that something had happened to " the national consciousness , " that the " great convulsion " had ...
... wrote Henry James in his life of Hawthorne . Writing , as he was , fourteen years after Appomattox , James could not fail to be aware that something had happened to " the national consciousness , " that the " great convulsion " had ...
Página 3
... wrote : " No human effort , on a grand scale , has ever yet resulted ac- cording to the purpose of its projectors . The advantages are always incidental . Man's accidents are God's purposes . We miss the good we sought and do the good ...
... wrote : " No human effort , on a grand scale , has ever yet resulted ac- cording to the purpose of its projectors . The advantages are always incidental . Man's accidents are God's purposes . We miss the good we sought and do the good ...
Página 8
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Contenido
Prophets of Perfection | 7 |
Conservatives in a Radical Age | 23 |
The Impending Crisis | 36 |
The War as Idea and Experience 18601865 | 51 |
Secession Rebellion and Ideology | 53 |
The Spirit of 61 | 65 |
This Cruel War The Individual Response to Suffering | 79 |
The Sanitary Elite The Organized Response to Suffering | 98 |
The Martyr and His Friends | 151 |
The Strenuous Life | 166 |
The Legacy | 181 |
The Twilight of Humanitarianism | 183 |
Science and the New Intellectuals | 199 |
The Moral Equivalent of War | 217 |
Notes | 239 |
269 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Inner Civil War: Northern Intellectuals and the Crisis of the Union George M. Fredrickson Sin vista previa disponible - 1965 |
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