Douglas Southall Freeman: Difference between revisions

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== Writing career ==
[[File:Douglas Southall Freeman, elder.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|{{center|Douglas Southall Freeman}}]]
 
===''Lee's Dispatches''===
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Freeman's ''R. E. Lee: A Biography'' established the Virginia School of Civil War scholarship, an approach to writing Civil War history that concentrated on the Eastern Theater of the war, focused the narrative on generals over the common soldier, centered the analysis on military campaigns over social and political events, and treated his Confederate subjects with sympathy. This approach to writing Civil War history would lead some critics to label Freeman a "[[Lost Cause of the Confederacy|Lost Cause]]" historian,<ref name="johnson"/> an allusion to the literary and intellectual movement that sought to reconcile the traditional white society of the South to the defeat of the [[Confederate States of America]].<ref name="gallagher">Gallagher, Gary.''Jubal A. Early, the Lost Cause, and Civil War History: A Persistent Legacy''. Marquette University Press, 1995. {{ISBN|0-87462-328-6}}.</ref> Freeman began work on his biography of Lee in 1926; by the time he had completed his four volume work in 1933, he had committed some 6,100 hours to the effort.<ref name=":0">[[#malone|Freeman, Malone, 1954]], p. xviii</ref>
 
[[File:Douglas Southall Freeman, elder.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|{{center|DouglasFreeman Southallin Freeman}}his latter years]]
 
===''Lee's Lieutenants: A Study in Command''===