For a generation, scholarship on the Reconstruction era has rightly
focused on the struggles of the recently emancipated for a
meaningful freedom and defined its success or failure largely in
those terms. In
The Ordeal of the Reunion, Mark Wahlgren
Summers goes beyond this vitally important question, focusing on
Reconstruction's need to form an enduring Union without sacrificing
the framework of federalism and republican democracy. Assessing the
era nationally, Summers emphasizes the variety of conservative
strains that confined the scope of change, highlights the war's
impact and its aftermath, and brings the West and foreign policy
into an integrated narrative. In sum, this book offers a fresh
explanation for Reconstruction's demise and a case for its
essential successes as well as its great failures. Indeed, this
book demonstrates the extent to which the victors' aims in 1865
were met--and at what cost.
Summers depicts not just a heroic, tragic moment with equal rights
advanced and then betrayed but a time of achievement and
consolidation, in which nationhood and emancipation were placed
beyond repeal and the groundwork was laid for a stronger, if not
better, America to come.