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i am indebted to so many people in so many places that I cannot reasonably list them all. Chris Phillips, Mark Lause, Wayne Durrill, and Martin Francis kick-started my thinking about the nexus between identity, collective memory, cultural politics, and materiality as they relate to the Civil War era. I formulated this project slowly, presenting parts of it at conferences, debating it in workshops, and discussing it in bars over rounds of beer. David Roediger, Alice Kessler-Harris, Andrew Hartman, Matt Hulbert, Paul M. Renfro, Bob Hutton, and Jacob Lee all read and ruminated on parts of this work. To them I extend my gratitude. Robert J. Cook, Jeff Johnson, Keri Leigh Merritt, Rashauna Johnson, and A. J. Aiseraithe commented on smaller portions, namely conference papers, and provided helpful feedback. Robert Weir, Ernest Freeberg, Christopher Phelps, Tom Lorman, Worth Robert Miller, Dana Caldemeyer, Scott Huffard, Blake Renfro, Evan Hart, Mike Crane, Patrick Whitehead, Dan Breen, Nina Silber, and Frank Towers also assisted generously in different capacities. I am likewise duty-bound to thank the staffs of various libraries and archives, from Amsterdam to Ann Arbor, and from Chicago to Chapel Hill. Through both grants and award money, the National Endowment for the Humanities, Albany State University, and the Center for Civil War Research at the University of Mississippi provided financial assistance toward my research. Finally, I offer a special thanks to my editor, James G. Engelhardt, for believing in this project and seeing it through. It goes without saying that any mistakes are fully my own.
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