The American Civil War (1861-65) remains a searing event in the
collective consciousness of the United States. It was one of the
bloodiest conflicts in modern history, claiming the lives of at least
600,000 soldiers and an unknown number of civilians and slaves. The
Civil War was also one of the world's first truly industrial conflicts,
involving railroads, the telegraph, steamships and mass-manufactured
weaponry. The eventual victory of the Union over the Confederacy rang
the death-knell for American slavery, and set the USA on the path to
becoming a truly world power. Paul Christopher Anderson shows how and
why the conflict remains the nation's defining moment, arguing that it
was above all a struggle for power and political supremacy but was also
a struggle for the idea of America. Melding social, cultural and
military history, the author explores iconic battles like Shiloh,
Chickamauga, Antietam and Gettysburg, as well as the bitterly contesting
forces underlying them and the myth-making that came to define them in
aftermath. He shows that while both sides began the war in order to
preserve - the integrity of the American state in the case of the Union,
the integrity of a culture, a value system, and as slave society in the
case of the Confederacy - it allowed the American South to define a
regional identity that has survived into modern times.