Book contents
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors to Volume II
- Note on the Text
- Part I Causes
- Part II Managing the War
- 4 Strategy, Operations, and Tactics
- 5 Union Military Leadership
- 6 Confederate Military Leadership
- 7 Technology and War
- 8 Armies and Discipline
- 9 Financing the War
- 10 Guerrilla Wars
- 11 Occupation
- 12 Atrocities, Retribution, and Laws
- 13 Environmental War
- 14 Civil War Health and Medicine
- 15 Prisoners of War
- Part III The Global War
- Part IV Politics
- Index
- References
12 - Atrocities, Retribution, and Laws
from Part II - Managing the War
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2019
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors to Volume II
- Note on the Text
- Part I Causes
- Part II Managing the War
- 4 Strategy, Operations, and Tactics
- 5 Union Military Leadership
- 6 Confederate Military Leadership
- 7 Technology and War
- 8 Armies and Discipline
- 9 Financing the War
- 10 Guerrilla Wars
- 11 Occupation
- 12 Atrocities, Retribution, and Laws
- 13 Environmental War
- 14 Civil War Health and Medicine
- 15 Prisoners of War
- Part III The Global War
- Part IV Politics
- Index
- References
Summary
The American Civil War was not a total war. Although the conflict occasioned immense carnage, Union and Confederate armies never systematically disregarded distinctions between combatant and noncombatant, the definitive feature of the total wars of the twentieth century. Nor was the Civil War the first “modern” war, at least if defined by revolutionary innovations in military technologies and tactics, or by a dramatic expansion in the scope and scale of the conflict’s destruction.
Scholarly debates over whether the Civil War was a total or modern war were, at their best, meant to provide a better understanding of the character of the Civil War as a military conflict. If Civil War historians now generally agree that the conflict was neither “total” nor “modern,” the larger task of more precisely comprehending the nature and limits of the war’s violence still remains.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the American Civil War , pp. 235 - 248Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019