最后的安息之地:布莱恩-马修-乔丹和乔纳森-W-怀特编著的《对内战墓地意义的思考》(评论)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY
Boyd R. Harris
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The scope of loss during the Civil War is still unparalleled in American history, with 2 percent of the population having died during those four years. COVID-19 has killed over one million Americans, but an event at the scale of the Civil War would have meant over six million dead by 2023. This analogy is perhaps as close as we can get to understanding the cataclysmic cost of the war for that generation of Americans. How they understood that loss and what it means to our present generation are the subjects of <em>Final</em> <strong>[End Page 624]</strong> <em>Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves</em>, edited by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White. Containing academic scholarship alongside personal reminiscences from nearly thirty historians, <em>Final Resting Places</em> provides a wide-ranging depiction of gravesites, burial pits, and memorials from all around the United States and also in Brazil.</p> <p>Emphasizing the eclectic nature of death during the Civil War is the greatest strength of the book. Readers will learn not only about the resting places of Generals Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant but also about the recovery of sailors from the sunken U.S.S. <em>Monitor</em>, the grave of a Black porter and valet in the Abraham Lincoln White House, and the double tomb-stones on the grave of Albert D. J. Cashier in Illinois. It is commendable to the contributors that more than half the book focuses on the final resting places of common soldiers, Native Americans, enslaved people, and civilians. Enough ink has been spilled writing about the graves and memorials of generals and presidents. Focusing on the common individual is also in keeping with the overall commemoration and memorialization of the war in both the North and the South.</p> <p>Highlighting the common person’s death also conveys the gaping hole that loss creates among families and communities. Throughout the book, the recurring theme of closure emerges as the driving force for both the survivors of the war and the contributing historians themselves. Whether it is Colonel William C. Oates of Alabama spending decades looking for his brother’s body, lost at Gettysburg, or Dr. Barbara A. Gannon remembering her mother’s recent passing while attending a Memorial Day ceremony in the 1990s, readers will encounter several instances in which to ponder the impact death can have in one’s own life. Those large questions about mortality, life experiences, responsibility, and culpability appear in a very personal way throughout the recounted experiences of the contributors. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 最后安息之地:布莱恩-马修-乔丹(Brian Matthew Jordan)和乔纳森-W-怀特(Jonathan W. White)编,博伊德-R-哈里斯(Boyd R. Harris)译:对内战坟墓意义的思考》。布莱恩-马修-乔丹和乔纳森-W-怀特编辑。UnCivil Wars.(雅典:乔治亚大学出版社,2023 年。第 xiv 页,第 358 页。纸质版,34.95 美元,ISBN 978-0-8203-6456-8;布质版,114.95 美元,ISBN 978-0-8203-6455-1)。任何一本关于南北战争的书都离不开死亡这个主题,但一本关于最后安息地的书却能让人对死亡有一种超越战争的清晰认识。内战期间的损失范围在美国历史上仍然是无与伦比的,有 2% 的人口在那四年中丧生。COVID-19 已造成 100 多万美国人死亡,但到 2023 年,内战时期的死亡人数将超过 600 万。这个类比也许是我们所能理解的战争给那一代美国人带来的巨大损失。他们如何理解这种损失以及这种损失对我们这一代人意味着什么,这就是《最后的安息之地》的主题:布莱恩-马修-乔丹(Brian Matthew Jordan)和乔纳森-怀特(Jonathan W. White)编著的《最后的[尾页 624]安息之地:关于内战墓地意义的思考》一书的主题。最终安息之地》收录了近 30 位历史学家的学术研究成果和个人回忆,对美国各地以及巴西的墓地、墓穴和纪念碑进行了广泛的描述。强调内战期间死亡的折衷性质是本书的最大优势。读者不仅可以了解罗伯特-E-李将军和尤利西斯-S-格兰特将军的安息之地,还可以了解从沉没的美国海军 "摩立特 "号中打捞出的水手、亚伯拉罕-林肯白宫中一位黑人门童和侍从的坟墓,以及伊利诺伊州阿尔伯特-D-J-卡西尔坟墓上的双墓碑。值得称赞的是,全书一半以上的篇幅都集中在普通士兵、美国原住民、被奴役者和平民的最后安息之地。关于将军和总统的坟墓和纪念碑的文章已经写得够多了。关注普通个人也符合南北双方对战争的整体纪念和追思。突出普通人的死亡也传达了失去亲人在家庭和社区中造成的缺口。纵观全书,"终结 "这一反复出现的主题成为战争幸存者和历史学家自身的驱动力。无论是阿拉巴马州的威廉-奥茨上校(Colonel William C. Oates of Alabama)花了几十年时间寻找他在葛底斯堡丢失的兄弟的遗体,还是芭芭拉-甘农博士(Dr. Barbara A. Gannon)在 20 世纪 90 年代参加阵亡将士纪念日仪式时回忆起她母亲不久前的去世,读者都会遇到一些让人思考死亡对自己生活的影响的事例。这些关于死亡、人生经历、责任和罪责的大问题以一种非常个人化的方式出现在撰稿人讲述的经历中。学生,尤其是高中生和本科生,将从本书中受益匪浅。历史学家的专业性往往会阻碍我们每个人成为历史学家的个人原因。将这些个人经历与理解内战中损失的影响这一更广泛的追求联系起来,使《最后的安息之地》成为一本非常引人入胜、深思熟虑的书。博伊德-R.-哈里斯阿尔贝马勒学院版权所有 © 2024 美国南方历史协会...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Final Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves ed. by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Final Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves ed. by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White
  • Boyd R. Harris
Final Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves. Edited by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White. UnCivil Wars. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2023. Pp. xiv, 358. Paper, $34.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6456-8; cloth, $114.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6455-1.)

The subject of death is never far from any book about the Civil War, but a book about final resting places provides a clarity about death that resonates beyond the war. The scope of loss during the Civil War is still unparalleled in American history, with 2 percent of the population having died during those four years. COVID-19 has killed over one million Americans, but an event at the scale of the Civil War would have meant over six million dead by 2023. This analogy is perhaps as close as we can get to understanding the cataclysmic cost of the war for that generation of Americans. How they understood that loss and what it means to our present generation are the subjects of Final [End Page 624] Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves, edited by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White. Containing academic scholarship alongside personal reminiscences from nearly thirty historians, Final Resting Places provides a wide-ranging depiction of gravesites, burial pits, and memorials from all around the United States and also in Brazil.

Emphasizing the eclectic nature of death during the Civil War is the greatest strength of the book. Readers will learn not only about the resting places of Generals Robert E. Lee and Ulysses S. Grant but also about the recovery of sailors from the sunken U.S.S. Monitor, the grave of a Black porter and valet in the Abraham Lincoln White House, and the double tomb-stones on the grave of Albert D. J. Cashier in Illinois. It is commendable to the contributors that more than half the book focuses on the final resting places of common soldiers, Native Americans, enslaved people, and civilians. Enough ink has been spilled writing about the graves and memorials of generals and presidents. Focusing on the common individual is also in keeping with the overall commemoration and memorialization of the war in both the North and the South.

Highlighting the common person’s death also conveys the gaping hole that loss creates among families and communities. Throughout the book, the recurring theme of closure emerges as the driving force for both the survivors of the war and the contributing historians themselves. Whether it is Colonel William C. Oates of Alabama spending decades looking for his brother’s body, lost at Gettysburg, or Dr. Barbara A. Gannon remembering her mother’s recent passing while attending a Memorial Day ceremony in the 1990s, readers will encounter several instances in which to ponder the impact death can have in one’s own life. Those large questions about mortality, life experiences, responsibility, and culpability appear in a very personal way throughout the recounted experiences of the contributors. Students, particularly ones in high school and undergraduate classes, will benefit from this book. Too often the professionalism of the historian hinders the personal reasons that each of us have in becoming historians. Connecting those individual experiences to the larger pursuit of understanding the impact of loss in the Civil War makes Final Resting Places a very engaging and thoughtful book.

Boyd R. Harris College of the Albemarle Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...

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