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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew F. LangPublisher: The University of North Carolina Press Imprint: The University of North Carolina Press Weight: 0.151kg ISBN: 9781469672496ISBN 10: 1469672499 Pages: 568 Publication Date: 30 August 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"A Contest of Civilizations is a major accomplishment, a welcome addition to the superb Littlefield History of the Civil War Era, and a valuable guide to the current state of the field. Future scholars would do well to tease out additional iterations of American exceptionalism, a protean concept that, as Lang demonstrates, has been entangled in some of the nation's greatest achievements and gravest sins.""--The North Carolina Historical Review A Contest of Civilizations is a sweeping, provocative narrative of the Civil War era, one that will prompt readers to think about the causes and consequences of this conflict in new ways. Lang adeptly weaves together different strands of a complex history to create a cohesive comprehensive story that includes diverse viewpoints drawn from a range of sources. This book expands our understanding of the intellectual history of the nineteenth-century United States and complements existing literature about the Civil War from a global perspective. Both scholarly and non-academic readers interested in the history of the Civil War era will enjoy reading this thoughtful, well-researched book.""--American Nineteenth Century History A Contest of Civilizations is an important contribution to seeing the US Civil War era in a global context and American nationalism as preeminently an ideological enterprise. . . . A powerful corrective to the Americans-as-emulators narrative that characterizes too many 'United States and the world' and nationalism studies.""--H-Nationalism A Contest of Civilizations makes a splendid capstone to the Littlefield History of the Civil War series. The book's measured prose will bring conviction to scholars, particularly those who appreciate knowing what people thought and said, with what they did about it trailing after.""--The Journal of Southern History [I]nteresting and innovative. . . . Lang has produced a masterful synthesis that graduate students and scholars will appreciate.""--Missouri Historical Review A comprehensive study of the ways in which the Civil War generation viewed the sectional crisis through multiple lenses of American exceptionalism.""--Civil War Monitor Lang has produced a thought-provoking and innovative work prodigiously incorporating the formidable volume of scholarship available on the Civil War era.""--Journal of the Civil War Era Lang's tour de force is a compelling and essential read. He shows how Americans' self-anointed claim of exceptionalism was, and is, premised on a supposed consensus on liberty's meaning that never was and perhaps will never be. Vital reading for all.""--Library Journal, starred review Rich with challenging ideas . . . Lang reminds readers that many 19th-century Americans embraced the notion with a fervor that colored their unsuccessful effort to avert war, the war's progression, and its aftermath. That it continues to inform our current day politics, while left unsaid, is nevertheless evident.""--Civil War Times" A Contest of Civilizations is a major accomplishment, a welcome addition to the superb Littlefield History of the Civil War Era, and a valuable guide to the current state of the field. Future scholars would do well to tease out additional iterations of American exceptionalism, a protean concept that, as Lang demonstrates, has been entangled in some of the nation's greatest achievements and gravest sins.--The North Carolina Historical Review A Contest of Civilizations is an important contribution to seeing the US Civil War era in a global context and American nationalism as preeminently an ideological enterprise. . . . A powerful corrective to the Americans-as-emulators narrative that characterizes too many 'United States and the world' and nationalism studies.--H-Nationalism A Contest of Civilizations makes a splendid capstone to the Littlefield History of the Civil War series. The book's measured prose will bring conviction to scholars, particularly those who appreciate knowing what people thought and said, with what they did about it trailing after.--The Journal of Southern History [I]nteresting and innovative. . . . Lang has produced a masterful synthesis that graduate students and scholars will appreciate.--Missouri Historical Review A comprehensive study of the ways in which the Civil War generation viewed the sectional crisis through multiple lenses of American exceptionalism.--Civil War Monitor Lang has produced a thought-provoking and innovative work prodigiously incorporating the formidable volume of scholarship available on the Civil War era.--Journal of the Civil War Era Rich with challenging ideas . . . Lang reminds readers that many 19th-century Americans embraced the notion with a fervor that colored their unsuccessful effort to avert war, the war's progression, and its aftermath. That it continues to inform our current day politics, while left unsaid, is nevertheless evident.--Civil War Times A Contest of Civilizations is a sweeping, provocative narrative of the Civil War era, one that will prompt readers to think about the causes and consequences of this conflict in new ways. Lang adeptly weaves together different strands of a complex history to create a cohesive comprehensive story that includes diverse viewpoints drawn from a range of sources. This book expands our understanding of the intellectual history of the nineteenth-century United States and complements existing literature about the Civil War from a global perspective. Both scholarly and non-academic readers interested in the history of the Civil War era will enjoy reading this thoughtful, well-researched book.--American Nineteenth Century History Lang's tour de force is a compelling and essential read. He shows how Americans' self-anointed claim of exceptionalism was, and is, premised on a supposed consensus on liberty's meaning that never was and perhaps will never be. Vital reading for all.--Library Journal, starred review Author InformationAndrew F. Lang is Beverly B. and Gordon W. Gulmon Scholar in the Humanities and associate professor of history at Mississippi State University. 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