William W. Freehling is the Singletary Professor of the Humanities at the University of Kentucky.
"This is a thought-provoking book. Because it contains so many
reflections on so many subjects, it should stimulate the reader to
ponder some of the issues raised."--Civil War History
"The eleven essays in this collection summarize the best work and
most provocative insights of a leading historian of the Old South
on the role of slavery in the coming of the Civil War....These
essays command our attention for their historiographical
sophistication and their challenging reformation of the centrality
of slavery in shaping Amerian history from the Revolution through
the Civil War."--Georgia Historical Quarterly
"William W. Freehling is one of the leading chroniclers of the
antebellum period today."--Southern Partisan
"There is much food for thought here! Anybody interested in
American history in the 19th Century in general and the causes of
the Civil War in particular will find this collection of essays a
fascinating and enjoyable read."--The Civil War News
"William Freehling has things to say, now said more clearly, about
the coming of the Civil War that are as trenchant as anything
written in recent years."--he Times Literary Supplement
"In this book, Freehling has produced a series of well thought-out
and well-written essays....This is a book that will cause its
readers to rethink their attitudes about historical writing in
general and about early American history more
specifically."--History
"This is an outstanding contribution by a truly rare and remarkable
scholar. These essasys are fresh, critical, and often profound.
Freehling's prose is captivating."--Kenneth M. Startip, Williams
Baptist College
"Excellent book, cogently argued with fresh insights on the crisis
of the South."--Arthur L. Johnson, SUNY Potsdam
"A refreshingly self-reflective attitude toward scholarly efforts
to integrate multicultural concerns with traditional interest in
political events."--Library Journal
"This book is an unusual and fine work which argues with both
history and historians in a manner refreshing to both student and
instructor. It challenges both doubter and disciple of his
arguments."--Dr. Jack J. Cardoso, Buffalo State College, SUNY
"Freehling offers a thoughtful collection of essays--some new, some
thoroughly revised--reflecting 30 years of thoughts on the nature
of slavery and the causes of the Civil War...Although slavery
remains difficult to understand on any but an abstract level, it is
to Freehling's great credit that he has offered an immensely
readable explanation of the forces that created--and ultimately
made impossible--what the slaveholders chose to describe simply as
the
'Peculiar Institution.'"--Publishers Weekly
"In his most impressive essay, Freehling tracks the growing
antebellum ambiguities of the founding fathers toward slavery as
embedded in the Constitution. Perhaps his greatest contribution is
his encouraging, by example, the reintegration of history by fusing
the social, political, and military history of the war."--Michael
Lawrence Renshaw, The Citadel
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