Irrepressible Conflict or Blundering Generation? The Coming of the Civil War
Descrição
The Civil War and the years leading up to it are among the most studied periods in American history. Many of the interpretations of the coming of the War may be grouped into one of two major schools of thought: Irrepressible Conflict or Blundering Generation. The Irrepressible Conflict school argues that the North and South were becoming such different societies that they could no longer co-exist in one nation, and war was the inevitable consequence. However, the historians of this school do not all agree on what the crucial differences were between North and South. The Blundering Generation school argues that radically different societies can co-exist without going to war. Instead, a series of mistakes and misjudgments by a “blundering generation” of politicians allowed extremists to dominate, leading eventually to war.
Allan Nevins' Civil War, History
150 Years of Misunderstanding the Civil War - The Atlantic
Political Cartoons of the Lilly Library/The Colonial Years
Placing myself in the historiography « Freedmen's Patrol
PDF) Revisionism Reinvented?: The Antiwar Turn in Civil War
Irrepressible Conflict or Blundering Generation? The Comi…
Irrepressible Conflict or Blundering Generation? The Comi…
The Civil War, by James I. Robertson, Jr.: a Project Gutenberg eBook
PDF) The Irrepressible Conflict: Reasons for the inevitability of
Origins of the American Civil War - Wikipedia
inevitableavoidable Spectrum of Causality inevitable
18 Sectional Crisis
The Conflict Of The Rwandan Civil War
Journal of American History - Lincoln in the Journal of American
de
por adulto (o preço varia de acordo com o tamanho do grupo)