Gone but Not Forgotten
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Gone but Not Forgotten

Atlantans Commemorate the Civil War

Title Details

Pages: 268

Illustrations: 17 b&w photos

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 10/01/2020

ISBN: 9-780-8203-5831-4

List Price: $34.95

Hardcover

Pub Date: 10/01/2020

ISBN: 9-780-8203-5812-3

List Price: $120.95

Web PDF

Pub Date: 10/01/2020

ISBN: 9-780-8203-5813-0

List Price: $120.95

Subsidies and Partnerships

Published with the generous support of Bradley Hale Fund for Southern Studies

Gone but Not Forgotten

Atlantans Commemorate the Civil War

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  • Description
  • Awards

This book examines the differing ways that Atlantans have remembered the Civil War since its end in 1865. During the Civil War, Atlanta became the second-most important city in the Confederacy after Richmond, Virginia. Since 1865, Atlanta’s civic and business leaders promoted the city’s image as a “phoenix city” rising from the ashes of General William T. Sherman’s wartime destruction. According to this carefully constructed view, Atlanta honored its Confederate past while moving forward with financial growth and civic progress in the New South. But African Americans challenged this narrative with an alternate one focused on the legacy of slavery, the meaning of freedom, and the pervasive racism of the postwar city. During the civil rights movement in the 1960s, Atlanta’s white and black Civil War narratives collided.

Wendy Hamand Venet examines the memorialization of the Civil War in Atlanta and who benefits from the specific narratives that have been constructed around it. She explores veterans’ reunions, memoirs and novels, and the complex and ever-changing interpretation of commemorative monuments. Despite its economic success since 1865, Atlanta is a city where the meaning of the Civil War and its iconography continue to be debated and contested.

Winner

Excellence for Research Using the Holdings of Archives, Georgia Historical Records Advisory Council

About the Author/Editor

WENDY HAMAND VENET is a professor of history at Georgia State University. She is the author of A Changing Wind: Commerce and Conflict in Civil War Atlanta (Georgia), A Strong-Minded Woman: The Life of Mary Livermore, and Neither Ballots nor Bullets: Women Abolitionists and the Civil War, and the editor of Sam Richards’s Civil War Diary: A Chronicle of the Atlanta Home Front (Georgia).