
The Great Task Remaining Before Us: Reconstruction as America´s Continuing Civil War
Paul A. Cimbala
Through informative case studies, this illuminating book remaps considerations of the Civil War and Reconstruction era by charting the ways in which the needs, interests, and experiences of going to war, fighting it, and making sense of it informed and directed politics, public life, social change, and cultural memory after the war’s end. In doing so, it shows that “the war” did not actually end with Lee’s surrender at Appomattox and Lincoln’s assassination in Washington. As the contributors show, major issues remained, including defining “freedom”; rebuilding the South; integrating women and blacks into postwar society, culture, and polities; deciding the place of the military in public life; demobilizing or redeploying soldiers; organizing a
new party system; and determining the scope and meanings of “union.”
Product Details
About Paul A. Cimbala
Reviews for The Great Task Remaining Before Us: Reconstruction as America´s Continuing Civil War
-Stephen V. Ash University of Tennessee, author of A Year in the South: 1865 "An unusually strong collection of essays ... the scholarship is impeccable."
-Gaines M. Foster Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge "Cimbala and Miller have edited an important book that will help historians understand both Reconstruction and its connection to the larger Civil War era." -American Historical Review "Cimbala and Miller offer an extraordinary contribution to the historiography of Reconstruction by demonstrating its enormous diversity. Often misunderstood, Reconstruction was a time of defining liberty and for whom, of rebuilding physically and psychically, of changing and enduring. This collection of sound, thoughtful essays provides an extensive examination of this significant and complex period of U.S. history. A must-read for anyone examining Reconstruction, this book shows that the "great task" still remains before us.
-Orville Vernon Burton Author The Age of Lincoln