Reviews
An excellent job addressing a topic not discussed in adequate detail previously. This book deserves a place in local libraries and on the bookshelves of anyone interested in the contributions of women made during the American Civil War.-- Civil War News|9780807872635|, "Civil War buffs, feminists, and labor historians, students of the complex intersection of class, race, location, and gender will all thank Judith Giesberg for her thoughtful sketching out and then filling in of the void in our current portrait of women in the northern states during this volatile period in American history. . . . Draws together all available scarce resources to make a convincing argument for the major changes that took place in the lives of rural, working-class white, and African-American women as a result of the gaps and opportunities in culture created by the war."-- Journal of American Culture, [Giesberg] does an exemplary job using available sources to give voice to women previously overlooked and she offers insight into a world historians are only beginning to uncover.-- Ohio Valley History, "An original and fascinating contribution to the trend in Civil War studies that seeks to blur the traditional distinctions between the home front and the battlefield. . . . An important book that contributes to our understanding of the outcomes of the Civil War."-- The Journal of Southern History, "A highly original analysis of how the war affected working-class women and how those women affected the war effort in heretofore underrecognized ways, Army at Home is also a very valuable case study in how to apply larger theoretical insights to the Civil War era."--J. Matthew Gallman, author of America's Joan of Arc: The Life of Anna Elizabeth Dickinson, A valuable addition to the literature of the Union home front in general, not just that of Northern women. . . . Paints a rich portrait of the North. . . . This excellent work will quickly find its way onto many a syllabus, returning these women to their|9780807872635|, An original and fascinating contribution to the trend in Civil War studies that seeks to blur the traditional distinctions between the home front and the battlefield. . . . An important book that contributes to our understanding of the outcomes of the Civil War.-- The Journal of Southern History, "[Giesberg] does an exemplary job using available sources to give voice to women previously overlooked and she offers insight into a world historians are only beginning to uncover."-- Ohio Valley History, "Engaging. . . . Offers a distinctly new vantage point. . . . Original, thought-provoking, and insightful, this is a very valuable addition to Civil War scholarship."-- Civil War History, Relying on extensive, detailed research, Giesberg tells her story with clarity and verve. . . . This book goes far toward reminding us that the forgotten women who sewed the uniforms and made the munitions used in the war also felt that they sacrificed m|9780807872635|, "Persuasive . . . Giesberg's work leaves no room for doubt that the war dramatically altered the daily lives of working-class women, urban and rural, as well as the form and location of women's political engagement."-- The Annals of Iowa, A fine, well-written account that significantly enlarges our perspective of the often hidden, but no less dramatic, impact of the Civil War on Northern women.-- Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, "A valuable addition to the literature of the Union home front in general, not just that of Northern women. . . . Paints a rich portrait of the North. . . . This excellent work will quickly find its way onto many a syllabus, returning these women to their rightful place in the story of the American Civil War."-- Journal of American History, A valuable addition to the literature of the Union home front in general, not just that of Northern women. . . . Paints a rich portrait of the North. . . . This excellent work will quickly find its way onto many a syllabus, returning these women to their rightful place in the story of the American Civil War.-- Journal of American History, An original and fascinating contribution to the trend in Civil War studies that seeks to blur the traditional distinctions between the home front and the battlefield. . . . An important book that contributes to our understanding of the outcomes of the Ci|9780807872635|, "A fine, well-written account that significantly enlarges our perspective of the often hidden, but no less dramatic, impact of the Civil War on Northern women."-- Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Persuasive . . . Giesberg's work leaves no room for doubt that the war dramatically altered the daily lives of working-class women, urban and rural, as well as the form and location of women's political engagement.-- The Annals of Iowa, Relying on extensive, detailed research, Giesberg tells her story with clarity and verve. . . . This book goes far toward reminding us that the forgotten women who sewed the uniforms and made the munitions used in the war also felt that they sacrificed much, perhaps too much.-- American Historical Review, "In Giesberg's action-packed Civil War study, women risk body and soul to make a living and to protest segregation, conscription, and low wages. These are not teary-eyed maidens waiting out the war with hankies gripped to their throats; they embody home front struggles that paralleled battlefields in transforming U.S. society."--Victoria Bynum, author of The Free State of Jones: Mississippi's Longest Civil War, Engaging. . . . Offers a distinctly new vantage point. . . . Original, thought-provoking, and insightful, this is a very valuable addition to Civil War scholarship.-- Civil War History, Civil War buffs, feminists, and labor historians, students of the complex intersection of class, race, location, and gender will all thank Judith Giesberg for her thoughtful sketching out and then filling in of the void in our current portrait of women i|9780807872635|, "An excellent job addressing a topic not discussed in adequate detail previously. This book deserves a place in local libraries and on the bookshelves of anyone interested in the contributions of women made during the American Civil War."-- Civil War News, "Relying on extensive, detailed research, Giesberg tells her story with clarity and verve. . . . This book goes far toward reminding us that the forgotten women who sewed the uniforms and made the munitions used in the war also felt that they sacrificed much, perhaps too much."-- American Historical Review, "An excellent job addressing a topic not discussed in adequate detail previously. This book deserves a place in local libraries and on the bookshelves of anyone interested in the contributions of women made during the American Civil War."-- Civi, Civil War buffs, feminists, and labor historians, students of the complex intersection of class, race, location, and gender will all thank Judith Giesberg for her thoughtful sketching out and then filling in of the void in our current portrait of women in the northern states during this volatile period in American history. . . . Draws together all available scarce resources to make a convincing argument for the major changes that took place in the lives of rural, working-class white, and African-American women as a result of the gaps and opportunities in culture created by the war.-- Journal of American Culture