Empty Sleeves
2015 • 278 pages

"Brian Craig Miller provides medical history of the procedure, looks at men who rejected amputation, and examines how Southern men and women adjusted their ideas about honor, masculinity, and love in response to the presence of large numbers of amputees during and after the war. While some historians have explored the lives of the wounded, disabled and amputated soldiers throughout the major military conflicts of the twentieth century, few monographs have returned to a time when medical care remained primitive at best in American history: the Civil War... In his travels in the South over the past five years, Miller has combed through archives, producing a wealth of surgical and medical manuals, hospital records, surgeons reports, diary, letter and journal entries pertaining to amputation, legislative records, pension files and applications, newspaper reports and numerous anecdotes about what it means to lose a limb."--Provided by publisher.


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Series

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6 released books

UnCivil Wars

UnCivil Wars is a 6-book series with 6 released primary works first released in 2011 with contributions by Megan Kate Nelson, Brian Craig Miller, and John Patrick Daly.

Weirding the War: Stories from the Civil War's Ragged Edges
Ruin Nation: Destruction and the American Civil War
The Blue, the Gray, and the Green: Toward an Environmental History of the Civil War
Empty Sleeves
Beyond Freedom: Disrupting the History of Emancipation
The War After the War: A New History of Reconstruction

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