![]() Lecture 11 - Slavery and State Rights, Economies and Ways of Life: What Caused the Civil War? ![]() Lecture 10 - The Election of 1860 and the Secession Crisis Lecture 09 - John Brown's Holy War: Terrorist or Heroic Revolutionary? Lecture 08 - Dred Scott, Bleeding Kansas, and the Impending Crisis of the Union, 1855-58 Lecture 07 - "A Hell of a Storm": The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Birth of the Republican Party, 1854-55 Lecture 06 - Expansion and Slavery: Legacies of the Mexican War and the Compromise of 1850 Lecture 05 - Telling a Free Story: Fugitive Slaves and the Underground Railroad in Myth and Reality Lecture 04 - A Northern World View: Yankee Society, Antislavery Ideology and the Abolition Movement Lecture 03 - A Southern World View: The Old South and Proslavery Ideology Lecture 02 - Southern Society: Slavery, King Cotton, and Antebellum America's "Peculiar" Region Lecture 01 - Introductions: Why Does the Civil War Era Have a Hold on American Historical Imagination? Total war for individuals and society and the political and social challenges of Reconstruction. The crisis of union and disunion in an expanding republic slavery, race, and emancipation as national problem, personal experience, and social process the experience of modern, Those meanings may be defined in many ways: national, sectional, racial, constitutional, individual, social, intellectual, or moral. The primary goal of the course is to understand the multiple meanings of a transforming event in American history. This course explores the causes, course,Īnd consequences of the American Civil War, from the 1840s to 1877. HIST 119: The Civil War and Reconstruction Era, 1845-1877 (Spring 2008, Open Yale Courses). HIST 119: The Civil War and Reconstruction Era, 1845-1877
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