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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page review of The Day Dixie Died by Thomas and Debra Goodrich. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAdx.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
adjust to the new structure of society, namely the absence of slaves and the emergence of the black citizen. In most works on the topic of Reconstruction and the conditions
in the South there seems to be a relatively narrow, or extremely focused, examination of the African American plight and some examine the plight of the whites as they adjusted.
In The Day Dixie Died by Thomas and Debra Goodrich the work addresses an incredibly diverse number of perspectives concerning a relatively narrow time frame concerning this period in history.
The following paper offers a review of the work. The Day Dixie Died For all intents and purposes it appears as
though the authors wanted to illustrate the depth of how the whites, as well as the blacks, reacted to this particular time in history. In many ways one could well
read this work and see that it is clearly not politically correct and that is exactly the point for during this time in history the nation was not simply one
that experienced African Americans adjusting, but whites as well and their worlds were essentially torn asunder through the freedom of the slaves in the South. As such it is a
relatively focused, yet incredibly broad look at the struggles of many whites in the South in a timeframe of just a couple of years. The authors provide a wealth of
information from primary sources and the experiences of many individuals during this time, offering the premise that it was a time of hardships for whites in many respects, something not
always desired in mainstream society. In the modern society the focus on Reconstruction and struggling normally involves the perspectives of the African Americans for it is not necessarily desirable to
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