Keyword [Civil war] Result: 181 - 200 | Page: 10 of 10 |
181. | Contrasting cultural folkways in pre-Civil War America (nineteenth century, secession, slavery) |
182. | Fragmentation and reunion: Medicine, memory and body in the American Civil War |
183. | Discourse, action, and social change: The politics of race, slavery and abolitionism in pre-Civil War America |
184. | Western versus Chinese realism: Soviet-American diplomacy and the Chinese Civil War, 1945-1950 |
185. | Ironclads on rails: American Civil War rail road weapons, 1861-1865 |
186. | 'Together in torment': Trauma as dream in Faulkner's post-Civil War South |
187. | The mystic chords of memory: Nationalism, historical novels and the American Civil War |
188. | Charles A. Peabody: A 'Southern' reformer, horticulturalist, and nationalist |
189. | Alternative Slaveries and American Democracy Debt Bondage and Indian Captivity in the Civil War Era Southwest |
190. | HENRY WILLIAM RAVENEL, 1814-1887: SOUTH CAROLINA SCIENTIST IN THE CIVIL WAR ERA |
191. | Christ in the Margins: Confronting Racism through the (Written) Word in Post-Civil War America |
192. | 'He Has Earned the Right of Citizenship': The Black Soldiers of North Carolina in the Civil War; A Comment on Historiography, Treatment, and Pensions |
193. | Confederate deaths and the development of the American South |
194. | A New Birth of Freedom: The Effect of the Civil War and Reconstruction on Ohio Law |
195. | The Cambodian Civil War and the Vietnam War: A tale of two revolutionary wars |
196. | Espacios alternativos y nomadismo en tres poetas salvadorenas de la guerra: Leyla Quintana, Kenny Rodriguez y Eva Ortiz |
197. | 'Is this freedom?' government exploitation of contraband laborers in Virginia, South Carolina, and Washington, D.C. during the American Civil War |
198. | Slavery and the Civil War in Cultural Memory |
199. | A Phenomenological Understanding of the Lived Experience of Fighting for and in One's Homeland: Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990 |
200. | 'Deep in the wilderness grim': Reading trauma through landscape in the post-civil war works of Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, and Winslow Homer |
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