Description
Scholars of the Civil War era have commonly assumed that veterans of the Union and Confederate armies effortlessly melted back into society and that they adjusted to the demands of peacetime with little or no difficulty. Yet the path these soldiers followed on the road to reintegration was far more tangled. New Men unravels the narrative of veteran reentry into civilian life and exposes the growing gap between how former soldiers saw themselves and the representations of them created by late-nineteenth century American society. In the early years following the Civil War, the concept of the "veteran" functioned as a marker for what was assumed by soldiers and civilians alike to be a temporary social status that ended definitively with army demobilization and the successful attainment of civilian employment. But in later postwar years this term was reconceptualized as a new identity that is still influential today. It came to be understood that former soldiers had crossed a threshold through their experience in the war, and they would never be the same: They had become new men. Uncovering the tension between veterans and civilians in the postwar era adds a new dimension to our understanding of the legacy of the Civil War. Reconstruction involved more than simply the road to reunion and its attendant conflicts over race relations in the United States. It also pointed toward the frustrating search for a proper metaphor to explain what soldiers had endured.
A provocative engagement with literary history and historiography, New Men challenges the notion of the Civil War as "unwritten" and alters our conception of the classics of Civil War literature. Organized chronologically and thematically, New Men coherently blends an analysis of a wide variety of fictional and nonfictional narratives. Writings are discussed in revelatory pairings that illustrate various aspects of veteran reintegration, with a chapter dedicated to literature describing the reintegration experiences of African Americans in the Union Army. New Men is at once essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the origins of our concept of the "veteran" and a book for our times. It is an invitation to build on the rich lessons of the Civil War veterans' experiences, to develop scholarship in the area of veterans studies, and to realize the dream of full social integration for soldiers returning home.
This intriguing exploration of the post-Civil War period through its fiction and nonfiction illuminates how the era spawned a new understanding of war veterans that lives on today.
About the Author
John A. Casey Jr. is a Lecturer in English at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Reviews
"Terms like innovative and interdisciplinary are often used for works that are neither, but Casey's New Men is an exception. He nicely draws on the methods and secondary sources of both history and literature to create a unique study that explores ideas neither field could fully examine by itself." -- -Andrew L. Slap East Tennessee State University "New Men deftly blends historical and literary analysis to chart the emergence of Civil War veterans as a privileged class of citizens during the decades after Appomattox. Casey's insights into the militarization of late-nineteenth-century America, and the alternatives and limits to that process, offer a valuable framework for understanding the succession of postwar cultures that has since characterized the United States." -- -Thomas J. Brown University of South Carolina "Through close readings of novels, short stories, and memoirs by and about Civil War veterans, both Union and Confederate, white and black, John Casey's New Men offers a host of fresh perspectives on the transformative impact of war-time experiences on those who survived it. These literary lenses have much to tell us about how veterans saw themselves, each other, and the war itself, making this a major contribution to the ever-growing scholarship on the war's legacy and how it was shaped." -- -John C, Inscoe University of Georgia "New Men is a unique hybrid that takes an interdisciplinary approach to identifying the meaning of the very notion of 'veteran' in American society." -- -Barbara Gannon University of Central Florida "John A. Casey explores the complicated aftermaths of the Civil War for the 'new' men it created by grounding often rarely used literary sources in the lived history of the Gilded Age. This nuanced and often moving account of the ways white and black veterans struggled to protect their legacies and their interests against the perceptions of the rising generation captures the tension sparked by each clashing efforts to build a useful narrative of the war and of the men who fought it." -- -James Marten Marquette University
Book Information
ISBN 9780823265398
Author John A. Casey
Format Hardback
Page Count 248
Imprint Fordham University Press
Publisher Fordham University Press