Lamar Lecture Series

2011 Lamar Lectures

Gary Gallagher

John L. Nau III Professor of History at the University of Virginia

BECOMING CONFEDERATES: THREE PATHS TO A NEW NATIONAL LOYALTY

Gallagher

11:00 am, Thursday, January 26, 2012: "Consistent Conservative: Jubal A. Early's 'Patriotic Submission'"

7:30 pm, Thursday, January 26, 2012: "More than a Virginian: Robert E. Lee, Secession, and War"

10:00 am, Friday, January 27, 2012: "Youth and Sectionalism: Stephen Dodson Ramseur's Easy Transfer of Loyalty

One of the most renowned Civil War historians, Gary Gallagher is author of The Union War; Causes Won, Lost, and Forgotten; Lee and His Army in Confederate History; Lee and His Generals in War and Memory; The Confederate War; and Stephen Dodson Ramseur: Lee's Gallant General. He has edited or co-edited more than a dozen volumes on Civil War history, and he edits the Civil War America series from University of North Carolina Press.

Previous Lamar Lectures

  1. Donald Davidson (Vanderbilt) – Southern Writers in the Modern World
  2. Bernard May (Virginia) – Myths and Men: Patrick Henry, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson
  3. Jay B. Hubbell (Duke) – Southern Life in Fiction
  4. T. Henry Williams (LSU) – Romance and Realism in Southern Politics
  5. Arthur Palmer Hudson (UNC) – Folklore Keeps the Past Alive
  6. Dewey W. Grantham, Jr., (Vanderbilt) – The Democratic South
  7. Edd Winfield Parks (Georgia) – Edgar Allan Poe as Literary Critic
  8. Thomas D. Clark (Kentucky) – Three Paths to the Modern South: Education, Agriculture, and Conservatism
  9. C. Hugh Holman (UNC) – Three Modes of Modern Southern Fiction: Ellen Glasgow, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe
  10. Clement Eaton (Kentucky) – The Waning of the Old South Civilisation, 1860s-1880s
  11. No Lecture – NB: 2 were delivered in 1968
  12. Fletcher M. Green (UNC) – The Role of the Yankee in the Old South and Hodding Carter (Greenville, Mississippi) – Their Words Were Bullets: The Southern Press in War, Reconstruction, and Peace
  13. Floyd C. Watkins (Emory) – The Death of Art: Black and White in the Recent Southern Novel
  14. George B. Tindall (UNC) – The Disruption of the Solid South
  15. Louis D. Rubin, Jr., (UNC) – The Writer in the South
  16. Lewis P. Simpson (LSU) – The Dispossessed Garden: Pastoral and History in Southern Literature
  17. Clarence L. Ver Steeg (Northwestern) – Origins of a Southern Mosaic: Studies of Early Carolina and Georgia
  18. Walter Sullivan (Vanderbilt) – A Requiem for the Renascence: The State of Fiction in the Modern South
  19. Merrill D. Peterson (Virginia) – Adams and Jefferson: A Revolutionary Dialogue
  20. Jack P. Greene (Johns Hopkins) – Paradise Defined: Studies in the Relationship between Historical Consciousness and the Emergence of Corporate Identities in Plantation America, 1650-1800 (unpublished)
  21. Richard Beale Davis (Tennessee) – A Colonial Southern Bookshelf: Reading the Eighteenth Century
  22. Marcus Cunliffe (Sussex) – Chattel Slavery and Wage Slavery: The Anglo-American Context, 1830-1860
  23. Samuel S. Hill (Florida) – South and North in American Religion: A Comparative Analysis by Selected Epochs
  24. Thomas Daniel Young (Vanderbilt) – Waking Their Neighbors Up: The Nashville Agrarians Rediscovered
  25. Paul M. Gaston (Virginia) – Women of Fair Hope
  26. Richard N. Current (North Carolina, Greensboro) – Northernizing the South
  27. R. Don Higginbotham (North Carolina) – George Washington and the American Military Tradition
  28. Cleanth Brooks (Yale) – The Language of the American South
  29. John Shelton Reed (UNC) – Southern Folk, Plain and Fancy
  30. Marion Montgomery (Georgia) – Possum, and Other Receits for the Recovering of “Southern Being”
  31. Don E. Fehrenbacher (Stanford) – Constitutions and Constitutionalism in the Slaveholding South
  32. Lucinda H. MacKethan (North Carolina State) – Daughters of Time: Creating Woman’s Voice in Southern Story
  33. Fred C. Hobson, Jr., (UNC) – The Southern Writer in the Postmodern South
  34. Bill Malone (Tulane) – Romance, Realism, and the Musical Culture of the Southern Plain Folk
  35. Eric J. Sundquist (UCLA) – The Hammers of Creation: Folk Culture in Modern Black Fiction
  36. John Blassingame (Yale) – Planter Testimony (unpublished)
  37. Bertram Wyatt-Brown (Florida) – The Literary Percys
  38. Jack Temple Kirby (Miami University) – The Countercultural South
  39. Trudier Harris (Emory) – The Power of the Porch: Narrative Strategies in Zora Neale Hurston, Gloria Gaynor, and Randall Kenan
  40. Drew Gilpin Faust (Penn) – Women on Women in the War: The Civil War in Southern Fiction (unpublished)
  41. Eugene D. Genovese (Emory) – A Consuming Fire: The Fall of the Confederacy in the Mind of the White Christian South
  42. Robert H. Brinkmeyer, Jr. (Mississippi) – Remapping Southern Literature: Contemporary Southern Writers and the West
  43. Adam Fairclough (University of East Anglia) – Teaching Equality: Black Schools in the Age of Jim Crow
  44. Edward Ayers (UVA), Thadious M. Davis (Vanderbilt), Linda Wagner-Martin (UNC), Joel Williamson (UNC) – South To the Future: An American Region in the Twenty-first Century
  45. Theda Purdue (UNC) – “Mixed Blood” Indians: Racial Construction in the Early South
  46. Peter H. Wood (Duke) – Weathering the Storm: Inside Winslow Homer’s Gulf Stream
  47. Michael O’Brien (Cambridge) – Henry Adams and the Southern Question
  48. James C. Cobb (UGA) – Before and After Brown: Jim Crow, the Brown Decision, and the Changing Face of Southern Identity
  49. Barbara J. Fields (Columbia) – Teach About the South (unpublished)
  50. Richard Gray (Essex) – A Web of Words: The Great Dialogue of Southern Literature
  51. Anne Goodwyn Jones (Mississippi) — Before and After the War: Formations of Southern Manliness (unpublished)
  52. Paul Harvey (University of Colorado at Colorado Springs) — Moses, Jesus, and the Trickster in the Evangelical South
  53. Mark Smith (South Carolina) — Histories of a Hurricane: Camille, 1969
  54. Minrose Gwin (North Carolina) — Rembering Medgar Evers: Aesthetics, Justice, and the Long Civil Rights Movement