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by Edward L. Widmer (Editor), George Kalogerakis (With), Clay Risen (With)
Between 2011 and 2015, the Opinion section of The New York Times published Disunion, a series marking the long string of anniversaries around the Civil War, the most destructive, and most defining, conflict in American history. The works were startling in their range and direction, some taking on major topics, like the Gettysburg Address and the Battle of Fredericksburg, while others tackled subjects whose seemingly incidental quality yielded unexpected riches and new angles. Some come from the country's leading historians; others from those for whom the war figured in private ways, involving an ancestor or a letter found in a trunk. Disunion received wide acclaim for featuring some of the most original thinking about the Civil War in years. For millions of readers, Disunion came to define the Civil War sesquicentennial.
Ted Widmer is a historian based at Brown University. He edited the two-volume set American Speeches for the Library of America and is writing a book about Abraham Lincoln's railroad journey in 1861. Clay Risen is an editor at The New York Times and the author of The Bill of the Century: The Epic Battle for the Civil Rights Act. George Kalogerakis is a deputy Op-Ed editor at The New York Times and a co-author of Spy: The Funny Years.
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