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More than any other Union general, Sherman was capable of conducting mass psychological warfare in order to break the heart of the Confederacy. Sherman succeeded in large measure because he could plumb and enact his own rage with ruthless clarity. The inner nature of Sherman's genius for destruction forms the center of Citizen Sherman.
But this biography is much broader than an analysis of war from Sherman's perspective, for Michael Fellman seeks to illuminate the emotional as well as the intellectual, ideological, and occupational lives of this extraordinary, but at the same time representative, American Victorian man.
It was men like Sherman, statesmen of the sword, who beat the Confederacy and destroyed the Indian nations, and Michael Fellman examines, with both detachment and compassion, how such men equipped themselves to secure American nationalism.
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Previews available in: English
Edition | Availability |
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1
Citizen Sherman: a Life of William Tecumseh Sherman
2013, Penguin Random House
in English
1299387470 9781299387478
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2
Citizen Sherman
June 30, 1998, Random House Value Publishing
Hardcover
in English
0517321742 9780517321744
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3
Citizen Sherman: A Life of William Tecumseh Sherman (Modern War Studies)
April 1997, University Press of Kansas
Paperback
in English
0700608400 9780700608409
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4
Citizen Sherman: A Life of William Tecumseh Sherman
1995, Random House
Hardback
in English
- 1st ed.
0679429662 9780679429661
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Work Description
The battles of the Civil War become background scenery in this long, sober examination of the mind and personality of Cump Sherman, 19th-century American military icon. William Tecumseh Sherman's father named him after a famous Indian chief. At age nine, after his father died, he was taken into the politically powerful Ewing family of Lancaster, Ohio. He sailed through West Point, married a Ewing daughter, drifted through a mediocre military career and a disastrous business one. He returned to the Army but suffered a near nervous breakdown in the early months of the Civil War. Then, after he and Grant won the Battle of Vicksburg, Sherman transformed himself into the most successful and ruthless American general of his age. He was also an outspoken racist, a compulsive womanizer, an oppressive father, and a man with strongly held antidemocratic political views. He court- martialed a civilian newspaper reporter who had written a viciously unfair article about him. In relating the life of the man best known for his ultradestructive 1864 march through Georgia, Fellman (History/Simon Fraser Univ., Canada; Inside War, not reviewed) concentrates on sketching a psychological portrait rather than on blow-by-blow descriptions of Sherman's military exploits. He uses his voluble subject's many letters, speeches, and writings to burrow deeply into his mind. This leads to several intriguing hypotheses involving the relationship between the fear of failure resulting from Sherman's early early debacles and his later success on the battlefield. Fellman's fixation on Sherman's psyche, however, also results in some facile, largely unconvincing psychological analyses. These include discussions about Sherman's self-love and the contention that Sherman feared exposing himself entirely to himself' because there were energies and conflicts inside of him that were frightening even to himself. A fresh, needed reinterpretation of Sherman the man, but a bit overwritten and sometimes off-base in its psychologizing.
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