| Civil War Reconsidered
The Duke Alumni Association and Duke's history
department presented a special on-campus educational conference, "Still
Fighting the Civil War?" in February. Covering what is arguably
the most important event in United States history, conference speakers
offered new perspectives on the war and explored its continued
impact on modern culture and politics, particularly in the South.
The title of the conference was inspired by the book Still Fighting
the Civil War, by David Goldfield, Robert Lee Bailey Professor
of history at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. One
of the conference's featured speakers, Goldfield discussed "how
the war has hindered the South's development, [how] the focus on
the past is in some ways a crippling focus," as conference
convener Margaret Humphreys, a Duke professor of history, put it.
The conference opened on Friday, February 16, with a presentation
by Jack Temple Kirby, W.E. Smith Professor Emeritus of history
at Miami University of Ohio. Kirby, a nationally recognized scholar
on the study of the South and environmental history, spoke about
the war's impact on the South in the hundred years after 1865.
On Saturday, Humphreys, a physician who is also an associate clinical
professor of medicine and Josiah Charles Trent Associate Professor
of medical humanities at Duke Medical Center, discussed the health
of black soldiers during the war, including blacks who fought for
the Confederacy.
The other scholars who spoke included Joseph Glatthaar, Stephenson
Distinguished Professor of history at the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, on Robert E. Lee's first month as commander of
the Army of Northern Virginia; Thavolia Glymph, assistant professor
of African and African-American Studies and history at Duke, on
black women during the war; and author Allan Gurganus on his use
of a letter by Walt Whitman as a source and inspiration for one
of his short stories.
"The war—the meanings of it, the glory of it, the disaster
of it—is all still very real to many people," said Humphreys.
The conference, which was open to the public, attracted a lively
mix of participants, including Duke alumni, staff members, and
students; members of the Durham community, including residents,
high-school students, and history teachers; and Civil War buffs
from as far away as New Jersey and Florida.
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