Introduction: Print Culture and the Formation of Southern Identity The emergence of newspapers and print culture in the antebellum South played a pivotal role in shaping regional identity and fostering southern solidarity. In an era where the spoken word was limited...
Author: Martin Munyao Introduction The legacy of segregation in the United States cannot be understood without interrogating the intricate relationship between historical memory, mythology, and the systematic justification of Jim Crow laws. While the Civil War and...
Author: Martin Munyao Introduction The legacy of lynching in American culture extends beyond its historical moment of brutality into the terrain of memory and commemoration. Lynching, as a racial and social terror, left not only physical scars but also cultural and...
Author: Martin Munyao Introduction The secession debates that gripped the United States in the mid-nineteenth century were not merely a political clash but a deep constitutional crisis grounded in competing legal theories of federalism and state sovereignty....
Author: Martin Munyao Introduction The legal framework of the New South constituted an intricate architecture that advanced economic modernization while entrenching racial hierarchy through statutes, ordinances, judicial doctrines, and administrative practices. From...
Author: Martin Munyao Introduction The 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution, ratified in 1870, ostensibly prohibited the denial of the right to vote on the basis of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. Nonetheless, disenfranchisement of...