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Gender Matters

Race, Class and Sexuality in the Nineteenth-Century South

L. Whites

$126.95   $101.37

Paperback

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English
Palgrave
11 May 2005
What role did gender play in the secession crisis? In the loyalty of the civilian population during the Civil War? In the formation of the Ku Klux Klan? In class organization and conflict in the postwar textile industry? Why was the first woman senator from the U.S. South? What role did sexuality and gender play in the explosion of racial violence in the late nineteenth century? These questions and many others concerning the critical role that gender played in the major events of the nineteenth-century South and the nation more generally are addressed in this collection of essays.
By:  
Imprint:   Palgrave
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 235mm,  Width: 155mm,  Spine: 14mm
Weight:   397g
ISBN:   9781403963123
ISBN 10:   1403963126
Pages:   300
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Further / Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

LEEANN WHITES is Associate Professor of History and Women's Studies at the University of Missouri-Columbia, USA.

Reviews for Gender Matters: Race, Class and Sexuality in the Nineteenth-Century South

In her powerful and persuasive series of essays, Gender Matters, covering everything from women's roles in the Civil War South to the first woman (Georgian Rebecca Latimer Felton) to serve in the United States Senate to feminist challenges to white supremacists in the late 20th century, LeeAnn Whites convinces us not only that gender does matter, but that the struggle to understand the influence of status and sexuality on American history should move to center stage. Whites demonstrates with her elegant and impressive historical case studies that by moving gender to the forefront, we can better appreciate historical agency, placing sex within a powerful nexus of interlocking issues such as class, region and race. Whites not only proves her proposition that gender matters, but offers trenchant, insightful criticism about why gender, and why struggles, must continue. --Catherine Clinton, author of Harriet Tubman, The Road to Freedom <br> Taking us far beyond a 'brothers' war, ' LeeAnn Whites demonstrates the centrality of gendered behavior and discourse to the Civil War and Reconstruction. Whether discussing men's wartime rhetoric, women's contributions to the Myth of the Lost Cause, or racial terrorization in the post-bellum South, her analysis of gender and class as underlying factors in the creation of a racially-segregated New South is unparalleled. This collection of essays will stimulate lively debates among students of the Civil War and nineteenth-century South. --Victoria Bynum, author of The Free State of Jones: Mississippi's Longest Civil War <br> In this superb collection of essays LeeAnn Whites illustrates just how much gender really does matter. Whites has a particular gift for the clever, evocative essay that forces the reader to examine evidence from new angles. Here she has strung together a series of small jewels, demonstrating how both the familiar and the unexplored are better understood when we pay attention to how gender shaped theu


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