Echoes of the American Civil War Abroad

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Alternate history
American History
American Other
Bilateral relations
Category=NHK
Civil War
Democracy
Emancipation
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Expansionism
Federalism
forthcoming
Historical memory
Imperialism
Liberal nationalism
National identity
Political agendas
Racial discourse
Reconstruction
Reform
Slavery
Symbolic resonance
Violent disunion

Product details

  • ISBN 9781666920307
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Through a constructivist approach, this book views the era of the American Civil War as a transnational phenomenon, emphasizing its role in shaping national identities and historical memory worldwide.
Extending identity narratives across time, contributors from Brazil, Canada, France, Mexico, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States analyze a wide range of primary sources, including diplomatic correspondence, periodicals, memoirs, intellectual writings, fiction, political cartoons, and murals in order to untangle the international impact of the U.S. Civil War. The countries selected for analysis vary typologically, yet each provides particularly rich material for reconstructing national identity discourses—within a transatlantic framework, as explored in the first two parts of the volume, and within the broader context of the American continents, as addressed in the third part. Russia is treated in a separate section as a distinctive case—at once European, “the Other Europe,” and non-European—not only due to the parallels in the domestic and international developments of the Russian Empire and the United States, but also because of the enduring impact of the American Civil War on bilateral relations and mutual perceptions. Taken together, the volume’s three sections intersect and reinforce one another, demonstrating how both the Union and the Confederacy were invoked as symbolic Others to shape national self-understandings, grounded in evolving configurations of interests, ideologies, and values.

Ivan Kurilla is Visiting Professor of History at The Ohio State University, USA.

Victoria I. Zhuravleva is Professor of History and Chair of the American Studies Department at the Russian State University for the Humanities, Moscow, Russia.