Athens, Ga.: University of Georgia Press, 2012. Pp.
xvii, 332. Illus., notes, biblio., index. $24.95 paper. ISBN:
0820342513.
While the destruction wrought by
armed conflict is always mentioned in accounts of wars, it is not
usually the primary focus of attention. This is not the case with Ruin Nation, a volume in the University of Georgia Press series “Uncivil Wars”,
which takes a look at the cultural and social effects of the
destruction engendered by the Civil War on contemporary economic,
cultural, and social institutions and norms, as well as on the physical
environment, and, of course, on the people.
Primarily a cultural, environmental, and literary historian, Dr. Nelson (Harvard) is also the author of Trembling Earth: A Cultural History of the Okefenokee Swamp. In Ruin Nation she
uses letters, diaries, and images created by the people of the times to
provide insights not only into their individual understanding of what
was happening to them and their world, but also to examine how their
experiences, suffering, and interpretations of these have been
transmitted to us, often in highly sanitized or politicized fashion.
Although, as is often the case when non-specialists deal with military
history, there are occasional errors in terminology, this work takes an
important look at the effects of war.
An interesting read for those
interested in the effects of the war on civilians and well as soldiers,
and its longer term influence on society.
No comments:
Post a Comment