"This book, of interest to all students of southern history, is
also noteworthy for its imaginative blending of cultural and social
with political history."--History: Reviews of New Books
"What happened to the South's memory of the Civil War?...The whole
process is brilliantly described by Gaines Foster in this
fascinating book."--The Atlanta Journal/The Atlanta
Constitution
"This may well be the most thoughtful and stimulating book ever
written on the myth of the Lost Cause."--Virginia Magazine of
History and Biography
"A sophisticated and adventurous new perspective on postwar
southern thought."--Journal of Southern History
"An outstanding work that should appeal to anyone whose interest in
the Civil War goes beyond the wartime battlefield and into the
postwar lives of the Southern participants."--Civil War Times
"On the Lost Cause, none is better than Gaines Foster's new
book."--Pennsylvania Magazine of History & Biography
"An extremely important book, one that goes a long way toward
untangling the several levels of meaning of the Confederate
tradition."--North Carolina Historical Review
"A important and sophisticated analysis....An interpretive and
research tour de force."--The Alabama Review
"A most worthwhile study that shows considerable, even exhaustive,
research and makes some highly exciting and effective
points."--Bertram Wyatt-Brown, University of Florida at
Gainesville
"A welcome addition to the historiography of the southern
U.S."--Booklist
"A major addition to a growing body of literature that cuts across
disciplines to shed light on a central issue in the American
experience...[E]xciting and provocative."--Gerald Brauer,
University of Chicago
"An exceedingly provocative argument about the intermingling of
psychology and piety in America."--E. Brooks Holifield, Emory
University
"[An] original, absorbing book...Recommended for every town with a
Confederate statue or a United Daughters of the Confederacy chapter
and for college libraries everywhere."--Library Journal
"This book traces the rise and fall of the memorialization of the
Lost Cause and does so with considerable intelligence. Most welcome
is the tone; Foster explores the cult of the Confederacy in a
sympathetic yet distinctly sensible voice....The result is a book
that illuminates the New South, the Gilded age, and American
historical consciousness."--Virginia Quarterly Review
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