West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire

Author:   Kevin Waite
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
ISBN:  

9781469663197


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   30 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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West of Slavery: The Southern Dream of a Transcontinental Empire


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Full Product Details

Author:   Kevin Waite
Publisher:   The University of North Carolina Press
Imprint:   The University of North Carolina Press
Weight:   0.530kg
ISBN:  

9781469663197


ISBN 10:   1469663198
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   30 April 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

"West of Slavery recovers how a vast region dominated by scrupulous ruling elites, blessed by federal powerbrokers, and regulated by militant racial violence played critical roles in the sectional crises of the 1850s, the transnational aims of the slaveholding Confederacy, and the devastating white ""redemption"" of the Reconstruction era. In spanning the entire Civil War era, Waite compels scholars to reconsider their prior assumptions.""--Andrew F. Lang, Missouri Historical Review A significant achievement of scholarship. . . . As the scholarship on the Civil War in the West continues to develop, West of Slavery should long stand as a critical intervention in the literature.""--Civil War Monitor Corrects oversights on Western slavery that are rooted in familiar mythology. . . . By showing how slavery was integral to the development of the Southwestern territories, Waite brings much-needed energy to the study of Western history, which has for too long regarded the region as special and alien to the controversies that divided the rest of the country. This is a critical contribution to our understanding of why slavery poisoned the whole nation and not merely a portion.""--Los Angeles Review of Books Waite demonstrates that, from Thomas Jefferson on, the South had big plans for the West. . . . [This] enlightening book provides details of the Southern strategy to 'own' the West.""--Crosscut Waite provides vivid detail in this readable narrative, as well as abundant documentation of primary and secondary sources and helpful maps and illustrations. . . . Readers interested in the South and Confederacy will benefit from this fine work that broadens our understanding of this important era of American history.""--Library Journal Waite's statement that 'slaveholders lusted after a transpacific dominion' is vividly supported by this book. . . . Kevin Waite is not only a determined scholar. He is also a wonderful writer.""--Boom California ...a clear and energetic account that is eminently readable and teachable. It is a bold case for the importance of the West in up-to-date Civil War and Reconstruction histories, and for taking seriously the influence of slavery's partisans in the U.S. West and beyond."" - Western Historical Quarterly An important entry into the study of the region during this critical nation-building period, Waite's work reveals how the fight to ensure the continuation of slavery in the United States spread from coast to coast, providing an absorbing perspective on the road to civil war."" -- Civil War History Readers may be shocked to learn that no other free state has more Confederate monuments than California. Waite's map of their locations in the Epilogue would be a particularly effective teaching tool for historians of the West and Civil War memory. West of Slavery is engaging and convincing."" --Megan Kate Nelson, Southern California Quarterly Waite succeeds admirably in showing the arbitrariness of our contemporary historiographical divisions and how much can be gained by placing southern and western history in dialogue with one another."" --Karl Jacoby, Journal of the Early Republic"


[An] impressive work . . . Waite's argument usefully scrambles the North/South/West triptych that often organizes our study of the nineteenth-century United States --American Nineteenth Century History ...a clear and energetic account that is eminently readable and teachable. It is a bold case for the importance of the West in up-to-date Civil War and Reconstruction histories, and for taking seriously the influence of slavery's partisans in the U.S. West and beyond. - Western Historical Quarterly [Waite] deftly connects the contemporary debates over the transcontinental railroad, the fundamental economics of the era, the emerging politics of newly American states and territories like California, and an overarching vision of Southern leaders who sought to expand slavery... West of Slavery is, fundamentally, a broadening of horizons. - Emerging Civil War The volume should have strong appeal among readers and scholars with a wide range of interests in today's slavery, Civil War, westward expansion, and borderlands studies. - Civil War Books and Authors West of Slavery recovers how a vast region dominated by scrupulous ruling elites, blessed by federal powerbrokers, and regulated by militant racial violence played critical roles in the sectional crises of the 1850s, the transnational aims of the slaveholding Confederacy, and the devastating white redemption of the Reconstruction era. In spanning the entire Civil War era, Waite compels scholars to reconsider their prior assumptions. --Andrew F. Lang, Missouri Historical Review Waite presents a cogently argued, carefully organized, and deftly written history of [slaveholders'] transcontinental vision.--America's Civil War Waite's impressive work recovering a southern vision of transcontinental reach will be appreciated by historians of the nineteenth-century United States, the Civil War and Reconstruction, the U.S. South, and the North American West... As this wide appeal suggests, you could easily shelve West of Slavery in any number of locations - all the better to spark new connections between familiar stories, as Waite does so skilfully here.---American Nineteenth Century History West of Slavery is insightful, well researched, and a pleasure to read, making it accessible to scholars, students, and Civil War buffs alike.--H-CivWar Corrects oversights on Western slavery that are rooted in familiar mythology. . . . By showing how slavery was integral to the development of the Southwestern territories, Waite brings much-needed energy to the study of Western history, which has for too long regarded the region as special and alien to the controversies that divided the rest of the country. This is a critical contribution to our understanding of why slavery poisoned the whole nation and not merely a portion.--Los Angeles Review of Books A significant achievement of scholarship. . . . As the scholarship on the Civil War in the West continues to develop, West of Slavery should long stand as a critical intervention in the literature.--Civil War Monitor Waite demonstrates that, from Thomas Jefferson on, the South had big plans for the West. . . . [This] enlightening book provides details of the Southern strategy to 'own' the West.--Crosscut Waite's statement that 'slaveholders lusted after a transpacific dominion' is vividly supported by this book. . . . Kevin Waite is not only a determined scholar. He is also a wonderful writer.--Boom California Waite provides vivid detail in this readable narrative, as well as abundant documentation of primary and secondary sources and helpful maps and illustrations. . . . Readers interested in the South and Confederacy will benefit from this fine work that broadens our understanding of this important era of American history.--Library Journal


Waite provides vivid detail in this readable narrative, as well as abundant documentation of primary and secondary sources and helpful maps and illustrations. . . . Readers interested in the South and Confederacy will benefit from this fine work that broadens our understanding of this important era of American history.--Library Journal


Waite demonstrates that, from Thomas Jefferson on, the South had big plans for the West. . . . [This] enlightening book provides details of the Southern strategy to 'own' the West.--Crosscut Waite's statement that 'slaveholders lusted after a transpacific dominion' is vividly supported by this book. . . . Kevin Waite is not only a determined scholar. He is also a wonderful writer.--Boom California Waite provides vivid detail in this readable narrative, as well as abundant documentation of primary and secondary sources and helpful maps and illustrations. . . . Readers interested in the South and Confederacy will benefit from this fine work that broadens our understanding of this important era of American history.--Library Journal


Author Information

Kevin Waite is assistant professor of history at Durham University.

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