Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part One Basic Questions
- Part Two Nationalism, Leadership, and War
- Part Three Mobilization and Warfare
- Part Four The Home Front
- 16 Loyalty and Dissent: The Home Front in the American Civil War
- 17 “The Better Angels of Our Nature”: Lincoln, Propaganda, and Public Opinion in the North during the Civil War
- 18 The Permanence of Internal War: The Prussian State and its Opponents, 1870-71
- 19 French Public Opinion in 1870-71 and the Emergence of Total War
- 20 Women and War in the Confederacy
- 21 German Patriotic Women's Work in War and Peace Time, 1864-90
- Part Five The Reality of War
- Part Six The Legacy
- Part Seven Conclusions
- Index
20 - Women and War in the Confederacy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2013
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part One Basic Questions
- Part Two Nationalism, Leadership, and War
- Part Three Mobilization and Warfare
- Part Four The Home Front
- 16 Loyalty and Dissent: The Home Front in the American Civil War
- 17 “The Better Angels of Our Nature”: Lincoln, Propaganda, and Public Opinion in the North during the Civil War
- 18 The Permanence of Internal War: The Prussian State and its Opponents, 1870-71
- 19 French Public Opinion in 1870-71 and the Emergence of Total War
- 20 Women and War in the Confederacy
- 21 German Patriotic Women's Work in War and Peace Time, 1864-90
- Part Five The Reality of War
- Part Six The Legacy
- Part Seven Conclusions
- Index
Summary
If Confederate women had heard the Civil War referred to as a total war, they would have agreed because of the war s immense effect on their lives. Union generals did not intentionally kill or physically harm unoffending women and children. Nevertheless, the pillaging and destruction of private property as a strategy of war was shocking to civilians. They saw such attempts to break the will of the people to resist as violations of codes of war. There was no way that women and children on the home front could avoid the war. Whether or not civilians were in the pathway of troops, the Confederate government required sacrifices that affected each citizen s daily life. Fighting of the war caused the widespread absence of men, which was the most serious problem confronting Confederate women as they attempted to hold their homes and families together amidst unfamiliar duties that had previously belonged to men (see Table 20.1). Most women reluctantly assumed management of homes, families, farms, and businesses after male family heads went away to war. Many women for the first time faced the necessity of making decisions on their own and devising ways to support their families. The shortage of men made old standards impractical.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- On the Road to Total WarThe American Civil War and the German Wars of Unification, 1861–1871, pp. 413 - 448Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997