This is the story of how Americans attempted to define what it
meant to be a citizen of the United States, at a moment of fracture
in the republic's history. As Erik Mathisen demonstrates, prior to
the Civil War, American national citizenship amounted to little
more than a vague bundle of rights. But during the conflict,
citizenship was transformed. Ideas about loyalty emerged as a key
to citizenship, and this change presented opportunities and
profound challenges aplenty. Confederate citizens would be forced
to explain away their act of treason, while African Americans would
use their wartime loyalty to the Union as leverage to secure the
status of citizens during Reconstruction.
In
The Loyal Republic, Mathisen sheds new light on the Civil
War, American emancipation, and a process in which Americans came
to a new relationship with the modern state. Using the Mississippi
Valley as his primary focus and charting a history that traverses
both sides of the battlefield, Mathisen offers a striking new
history of the Civil War and its aftermath, one that ushered in
nothing less than a revolution in the meaning of citizenship in the
United States.