Cambridge studies on the American South
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Cambridge studies on the American South
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Cambridge studies on the American South
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- Has parts35
- Death and the American South, edited by Craig Thompson Friend, Lorri Glover
- The Merchants' Capital, New Orleans and the political economy of the Nineteenth-Century South, Scott P. Marler
- Slavery and forced migration in the antebellum South, Damian Alan Pargas (Leiden University)
- Carolina's golden fields, inland rice cultivation in the South Carolina Lowcountry, 1670-1860, Hayden R. Smith
- Reviewing the South, the literary marketplace and the Southern Renaissance, 1920-1941, Sarah E. Gardner, Mercer University, Macon, Georgia
- African-Atlantic cultures and the South Carolina Lowcountry, Ras Michael Brown, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
- Thomas Jefferson, a modern Prometheus, Wilson Jeremiah Moses
- Thomas Jefferson's Ethics and the Politics of Human Progress, the Morality of Slaveholder, Ari Helo
- War stuff, the struggle for human and environmental resources in the American Civil War, Joan E. Cashin
- The sweetness of life, Southern planters at home, Eugene D. Genovese ; edited by Douglas Ambrose
- Beyond the rope, the impact of lynching on black culture and memory, Karlos K. Hill
- Claiming the Union, citizenship in the post-Civil War South, Susanna Michele Lee, North Carolina State University
- Mastering America, Southern slaveholders and the crisis of American nationhood, Robert E. Bonner
- Rethinking American emancipation, legacies of slavery and the quest for Black freedom, edited by William A. Link, James J. Broomall, University of North Florida
- Freedom in a slave society, stories from the antebellum South, Johanna Nicol Shields
- Contesting slave masculinity in the American South, David Stefan Doddington
- Performing disunion, the coming of the Civil War in Charleston, South Carolina, Lawrence T. McDonnell, Iowa State University
- A new plantation world, sporting estates in the South Carolina lowcountry, 1900-1940, Daniel J. Vivian
- The Georgia peach, culture, agriculture, and environment in the American South, William Thomas Okie, Kennesaw State University
- Thomas Jefferson and American nationhood, Brian Steele, University of Alabama, Birmingham
- Beyond the rope, the impact of lynching on black culture and memory, Karlos K. Hill
- Jefferson's freeholders and the politics of ownership in the Old Dominion, Christopher Michael Curtis
- Religion, race, and the making of Confederate Kentucky, 1830-1880, Luke E. Harlow, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
- Masterless men, poor whites and slavery in the antebellum South, Keri Leigh Merritt
- Dollars for Dixie, business and the transformation of conservatism in the twentieth century, Katherine Rye Jewell, Fitchburg State University
- Slavery, disease, and suffering in the southern Lowcountry, Peter McCandless
- Rebels against the Confederacy, North Carolina's unionists, Barton A. Myers, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia
- Gruesome looking objects, a new history of lynching and everyday things, Elijah Gaddis
- Freedom's crescent, the Civil War and the destruction of slavery in the Lower Mississippi Valley, John C. Rodrigue
- Black resettlement and the American Civil War, Sebastian N. Page, University of Oxford
- Women writers and journalists in the nineteenth-century south, Jonathan Daniel Wells
- Masters, slaves, and exchange, power's purchase in the Old South, Kathleen M. Hilliard, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa
- Cultivating success in the South, farm households in the postbellum era, Louis A. Ferleger, Boston University, John D. Metz, Library of Virginia
- Religion, community, and slavery on the colonial Southern Frontier, James Van Horn Melton
- At the altar of lynching, burning Sam Hose in the American South, Donald G. Mathews