Lincoln's Peace
The Struggle to End the American Civil War
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
A NEW YORKER BEST BOOK OF 2025 • One historian’s journey to find the end of the Civil War—and, along the way, to expand our understanding of the nature of war itself and how societies struggle to draw the line between war and peace
LOS ANGELES TIMES "TOP TEN BOOKS TO READ IN 2025"
"Eye-opening, disturbing, moving and at times jaw-dropping . . . Once in a great while a book arrives that allows us to rediscover the strange inexhaustibility of the Civil War. Lincoln's Peace is such a book.” —Tony Kushner
“Lincoln’s Peace does something remarkable: It makes us think about familiar questions in an entirely new and engaging way. A marvelous achievement.” —Jon Meacham
"Helps us understand what the war was all about and whether in some ways it is still being fought." —Eric Foner
We set out on the James River, March 25, 1865, aboard the paddle steamboat River Queen. President Lincoln is on his way to General Grant’s headquarters at City Point, Virginia, and he’s decided he won’t return to Washington until he’s witnessed, or perhaps even orchestrated, the end of the Civil War. Now, it turns out, more than a century and a half later, historians are still searching for that end.
Was it April 9, at Appomattox, as conventional wisdom holds, where Lee surrendered to Grant in Wilmer McLean’s parlor? Or was it ten weeks afterward, in Galveston, where a federal commander proclaimed Juneteenth the end of slavery? Or perhaps in August of 1866, when President Andrew Johnson simply declared “the insurrection is at an end”? That the answer was elusive was baffling even to a historian of the stature of Michael Vorenberg, whose work served as a key source of Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln. Vorenberg was inspired to write this groundbreaking book, finding its title in the peace Lincoln hoped for but could not make before his assassination. A peace that required not one but many endings, as Vorenberg reveals in these pages, the most important of which came well more than a year after Lincoln’s untimely death.
To say how a war ends is to suggest how it should be remembered, and Vorenberg’s search is not just for the Civil War’s endpoint but for its true nature and legacy, so essential to the American identity. It’s also a quest, in our age of “forever wars,” to understand whether the United States's interminable conflicts of the current era have a precedent in the Civil War—and whether, in a sense, wars ever end at all, or merely wax and wane.
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Historian Vorenberg (Final Freedom) reflects on when and where the Civil War really ended in this intricate account. Robert E. Lee's surrender at Appomattox in April 1865 is generally considered to be the war's end, but Vorenberg notes how fighting still waged in pockets around the country. (He singles out as the culprit behind the unrest an "unrepentant" Jefferson Davis—a "fantasist with a following" who nursed deluded visions of guerrilla grandeur.) After Lincoln's assassination, Andrew Johnson issued two proclamations in August 1865 addressing amnesty and reconstruction, the purpose of which, Vorenberg argues, was to again "signal that the war was over." Other notable "endings" include June 19, 1865, or Juneteenth, the day slavery ended in Texas, the last state to still enforce it; and Feb. 1, 1871, when Georgia became the last seceded state to rejoin Congress. Signs of continuation, on the other hand, also abounded, most notably white Southerners' violent resistance to Black political participation, but also the continuation of the Indian Wars of the plains and southwest. Vorenberg ruminates intriguingly on whether the latter conflict, which was prosecuted by both the Union and the Confederacy during the war, was actually an integral part of the Civil War itself, and whether its continuation into the 1880s can be seen as the war's long tail. He also astutely interrogates the notion that modern America is uniquely mired in "forever wars," suggesting instead that today's political scientists are likely idealizing the past. Expert analysis and eloquent prose make this a must-read for U.S. history buffs.