Description

Book Synopsis
This probing look at a generation of New Orleanians and how they redefined a society shattered by the Civil War engages historical actors on their own terms and makes real the human dimension of life during this difficult period in American history.

Trade Review
A richly detailed, thought-provoking study of politics in postbellum New Orleans... Breaks new ground and will generate fresh thinking about Reconstruction in New Orleans and the nation. Journal of American History Nystrom takes the reader on the journey from slavery to freedom, emancipation to suffrage then back into a harsh period of disfranchisement by the end of the nineteenth century... He moves beyond previous revisionist studies on Reconstruction by examining indicators of change by way of those making the decisions. Southern Historian A fascinating and complex story that Nystrom's narrative incisively clarifies to a degree no work before has managed to accomplish. H-CivWar, H-Net Reviews An excellent choice for any collection in U.S. history. Choice Nystrom now adds nuance to these studies by providing a close biographical reading of several New Orleanians as they struggled with questions of secession, occupation, emancipation, racial equality, and political division. -- Anthony J. Stanonis American Historical Review This is an important book for understanding postwar urban politics in the largest city in the South. It is deeply researched, splendidly written, and well contextualized within the larger historiography of Reconstruction. -- Aaron Astor Register of the Kentucky Historical Society

Table of Contents

The Quests
Part I
1. Voices from the Field
Part II
2. Origins, Schisms, and Crises
3. "Nobel or Rebel?"
4. MSF Greece Ostracized
5. The Return of MSF Greece
Part III
6. La Mancha
Part IV
7. Struggling with HIV/ AIDS
8. In Khayelitsha
9. A "Non-Western Entity" Is Born
Part V
10. Reaching Out to the Homeless and Street Children of Moscow with Olga Shevchenko
11. Confronting TB in Siberian Prisons with Olga Shevchenko
Coda
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

New Orleans after the Civil War

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Tue 7 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Justin A. Nystrom

    1 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of New Orleans after the Civil War by Justin A. Nystrom

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 10/06/2015
      ISBN13: 9781421416977, 978-1421416977
      ISBN10: 1421416972

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This probing look at a generation of New Orleanians and how they redefined a society shattered by the Civil War engages historical actors on their own terms and makes real the human dimension of life during this difficult period in American history.

      Trade Review
      A richly detailed, thought-provoking study of politics in postbellum New Orleans... Breaks new ground and will generate fresh thinking about Reconstruction in New Orleans and the nation. Journal of American History Nystrom takes the reader on the journey from slavery to freedom, emancipation to suffrage then back into a harsh period of disfranchisement by the end of the nineteenth century... He moves beyond previous revisionist studies on Reconstruction by examining indicators of change by way of those making the decisions. Southern Historian A fascinating and complex story that Nystrom's narrative incisively clarifies to a degree no work before has managed to accomplish. H-CivWar, H-Net Reviews An excellent choice for any collection in U.S. history. Choice Nystrom now adds nuance to these studies by providing a close biographical reading of several New Orleanians as they struggled with questions of secession, occupation, emancipation, racial equality, and political division. -- Anthony J. Stanonis American Historical Review This is an important book for understanding postwar urban politics in the largest city in the South. It is deeply researched, splendidly written, and well contextualized within the larger historiography of Reconstruction. -- Aaron Astor Register of the Kentucky Historical Society

      Table of Contents

      The Quests
      Part I
      1. Voices from the Field
      Part II
      2. Origins, Schisms, and Crises
      3. "Nobel or Rebel?"
      4. MSF Greece Ostracized
      5. The Return of MSF Greece
      Part III
      6. La Mancha
      Part IV
      7. Struggling with HIV/ AIDS
      8. In Khayelitsha
      9. A "Non-Western Entity" Is Born
      Part V
      10. Reaching Out to the Homeless and Street Children of Moscow with Olga Shevchenko
      11. Confronting TB in Siberian Prisons with Olga Shevchenko
      Coda
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Index

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