[A] sprawling account....Phillips' account of the middle border's Civil War is a welcome addition to a historiography of the Civil War that remains in many ways divided into North and South.

Nicole Myers Turner, The Michigan Historical Review

Despite the complex topic, The Rivers Ran Backward is a readable, well-written and exhaustively researched work (with a 47-page bibliography to prove it) and is certainly one of the most important Civil War books in recent memory.

Mark Christ, Kansas History

Phillips's thoroughly researched and well-argued account presents an original and persuasive interpretation that deserves wide attention. The Rivers Ran Backward should become a standard work on the trans-Appalachian West.

Jonathan M. Atkins, American Historical Review

Se alle

essential reading for anyone interested in the American Civil War and its unforeseen consequences.

Robert Cook, Reviews in History

Phillips' expert command of Kentucky and Missouri history enables him to analyze incisively the war's impact in the Lower North ... [The subfield's] most important and wide-reaching title to date.

Civil War Book Review

Most Americans believe that the Ohio River was a clearly defined and static demographic and political boundary between North and South, an extension of the Mason-Dixon Line. Once settled, the new states west of the Appalachians -- the slave states of Kentucky and Missouri and of the free states of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Kansas -- formed a fixed boundary between freedom and slavery, extending the border that inevitably produced the war. None of this is true, except perhaps the outcome of war. But the centrality of the Civil War and its outcome in the making of these tropes is undeniable. Historian Christopher Phillips contests the assumption that regional identities throughout the "Middle Border" states were stable in the era of the Civil War. States such as Missouri and Kentucky tended to identify as more western than southern during the first half of the nineteenth century. Conversely, much of the population of the lower Midwestern states of Ohio, Illinois, and Indiana had stronger cultural, economic, and political ties to slave states than to New England or the Middle Atlantic. But across the region the Civil War left an indelible imprint on the way in which residents thought of themselves and other Americans, proving as much a shaper as a product of regional identities. A sweeping argument employing a strong narrative, telling vignettes, and the voices of regional and national figures, this book makes a major contribution to Civil War history and to American history on a broader scale.
Les mer
A magnum opus on the history of the middle border states in the Civil War.
Prologue "There is a West" ; Introduction ; Interstice-White Salt, Black Servitude ; Chapter One: White Flows the River-Freedom and Unfreedom in the Early National ; West ; Interstice-North of Slavery, West of Abolition ; Chapter Two: Babel-Changed Persistence on Slavery's Borderland ; Interstice-Vox Populi ; Chapter Three: The Ten Year War-Sectional Politics in a Dividing Region ; Interstice-House of Cards ; Chapter Four: No North-No South-No East-No West-The Fiction of the ; Wartime Middle Ground ; Interstice-The Gates of Zion ; Chapter Five: Netherworld of War-Civilians, Soldiers, and the Dominion of War ; Interstice-War of Another Kind ; Chapter Six: Bitter Harvest-Emancipation and the Politics of Loyalty ; Interstice-The Art of Retaliation ; Chapter Seven: Shadow Wars-The Crucible of Social Violence ; Interstice-A River Between Them ; Chapter Eight: North Star, Southern Cross-The Politics of Irreconciliation4 ; Epilogue Rally Round the Flag ; Conclusion ; Abbreviations ; Notes ; Bibliography ; Acknowledgments ; Index
Les mer
"[E]xcellent....This valuable book spans a century of history and weaves together several key themes of recent Civil War-era scholarship....Phillips offers much more than a synthesis in this deeply researched volume that draws on manuscripts from some thirty different archives; he also provides a richly detailed portrait of a region that came apart as its residents reevaluated and redefined their most cherished loyalties and beliefs. These findings will encourage scholars to rethink the terms and concepts we use to study a period in which North and South took on meanings that are obvious only in hindsight."--Michael E. Woods, Journal of Southern History "[A] sprawling account....Phillips' account of the middle border's Civil War is a welcome addition to a historiography of the Civil War that remains in many ways divided into North and South."--Nicole Myers Turner, The Michigan Historical Review "Previous historians have explored the violence and internal fighting in the West, especially in Missouri, but few have provided as detailed an account of the war's effects on the region or considered as carefully its cultural legacy Phillips's thoroughly researched and well-argued account presents an original and persuasive interpretation that deserves wide attention. The Rivers Ran Backward should become a standard work on the trans-Appalachian West."--Jonathan M. Atkins, American Historical Review "Phillips' expert command of Kentucky and Missouri history enables him to analyze incisively the war's impact in the Lower North...[The subfield's] most important and wide-reaching title to date."--Civil War Book Review "[E]ssential reading for anyone interested in the American Civil War and its unforeseen consequences A 'sprawling' work, but one that conveys superbly the damage done by war to the diverse residents of a no less sprawling region that had once had grand hopes of saving the republic from the disastrous consequences of sectional conflict."--Reviews in History "A masterful study of the 'Middle Border' region Easy dichotomies about the Civil War era are complicated by Phillips's rich, complex narrative Indispensable reading for students of the Civil War era."--CHOICE "The region where five great rivers come together-the Ohio, Cumberland, Tennessee, Missouri, and Mississippi-experienced a civil war within the Civil War. Christopher Phillips' fresh perspective on this conflict offers new insights on the great American trauma that forged a renewed nation on the ruins of the old one. This book belongs on the shelf of everyone interested in the Civil War."--James M. McPherson, author of The War That Forged a Nation: Why the Civil War Still Matters "Christopher Phillips has written one of the most important books on the Civil War in a generation. Massively researched-down to local church records-sparkling with original thinking, and deeply humane, The Rivers Ran Backward illustrates how Americans struggled over the stakes of the conflict, the definition of freedom, and the very idea of North, South, and West. Phillips reveals the War Within the States, personal, intense, and hugely consequential."--T.J. Stiles, author of Custer's Trials: A Life on the Frontier of a New America "In a work of remarkable research and clear insight, Christopher Phillips has recast our understanding of a vast part of the American landscape during the Civil War. Phillips shows us that the war, and the society it defined, refused to be bounded either by the Ohio River or by comforting generalizations."--Edward L. Ayers, author of In the Presence of Mine Enemies: Civil War in the Heart of America "The remaking of 'the middle border' that The Rivers Ran Backward forwards rests on a fundamental remapping of American regional histories. Instead of treating the Ohio River as a divide between the realms of freedom and slavery that dated from the beginnings of the republic and produced the Civil War, this exhaustively researched, elegantly written, and powerfully argued book shows how the Civil War produced the division between North and South that was subsequently inscribed in the memories of the people on opposite sides of the middle border and written into the histories of the region and the United States."--Stephen Aron, author of The American West: A Very Short Introduction "[An] excellent work of scholarship. By focusing on the Middle Border, Phillips expands our understandings of the West and forces historians to reconsider the North-South sectional binary. As a result, The Rivers Ran Backwards significantly adds to understandings of the border region as well as the American West."--James G. Kopaczewski, The Civil War Monitor "The Rivers Ran Backward is a wonderfully deep distillation of a career's worth of scholarly investigation into the people, politics, society, and warfare of the western borderlands during the Civil War era. It is highly recommended."--Civil War Books and Authors "[Christopher Phillips] places the trans-Appalachian border under a lens to reveal, in fine-grained detail, the multitude of wars within the Civil War that flared on both sides of the Ohio River and west through Missouri and Kansas...[E]xhaustive research...[and] fine narrative skill...adds much to our understanding of this crucial region, untangling the shifting loyalties (and disloyalties) that tore the region apart."--Fergus M. Bordewich, The Wall Street Journal "A most creative and important work of scholarship [with...]penetrating arguments and vivid examples."--Missouri Historical Review "Scholarly, readable, and compelling."--Naval History Review "Phillips writes eloquently, sometimes even poetically...[and his] exhaustive research in primary and secondary sources sets a high standard for historical detail, so too as an example of first-class historical analysis. Readers will especially welcome the beautifully crafted short literary sketches that preface each of his book's nine chapters."--Ohio Valley History "[A] masterful combination of synthesis of existing scholarship and extensive primary research....Phillips's book will clearly be a seminal study of the Midwest during the Civil War and a work that scholars will be turning to--either for enlightenment or to challenge--for a long time."--Annals of Iowa "Christopher Phillips's meticulously researched and well-evidenced The Rivers Ran Backward... brings together insights gained over several decades of writing and publishing on the topic to construct a new and comprehensive interpretation of the border region and the sectional crisis."--April Holm, Journal of the Civil War Era "Popular history teaches us that the American Civil War pitted North against South over the interminable issue of slavery... While inherently correct, this simplistic rendering of the conflict lacks nuance... This is why Christopher Phillips's The Rivers Ran Backwards is so important. His study of the 'Middle West' before, during, and after the Civil War muddies the dominant perspective of a purely North-South divide."--H-Net
Les mer
Selling point: Multi-award winning book that chronicles the Civil War in the "Middle Border" states Selling point: Explores the creation of regional identity by formal and cultural politics during the war and its aftermath Selling point: Argues that historians have largely ignored the centrality of the war, and the West, to perhaps its most lasting outcome: the rise of regionalism as a force in postwar domestic politics
Les mer
Christopher Phillips is Professor of History and Department Head at the University of Cincinnati. He is the author of seven books, including Damned Yankee: The Life of General Nathaniel Lyon; Freedom's Port: The African American Community of Baltimore, 1790-1860; Missouri's Confederate: Claiborne Fox Jackson and the Creation of Southern Identity in the Border West; and The Civil War in the Border South.
Les mer
Selling point: Multi-award winning book that chronicles the Civil War in the "Middle Border" states Selling point: Explores the creation of regional identity by formal and cultural politics during the war and its aftermath Selling point: Argues that historians have largely ignored the centrality of the war, and the West, to perhaps its most lasting outcome: the rise of regionalism as a force in postwar domestic politics
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195187236
Publisert
2016
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
1046 gr
Høyde
163 mm
Bredde
239 mm
Dybde
46 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
528

Biografisk notat

Christopher Phillips is Professor of History and Department Head at the University of Cincinnati. He is the author of seven books, including Damned Yankee: The Life of General Nathaniel Lyon; Freedom's Port: The African American Community of Baltimore, 1790-1860; Missouri's Confederate: Claiborne Fox Jackson and the Creation of Southern Identity in the Border West; and The Civil War in the Border South.