Confederates in the attic by tony horwitz is a 1998 nonfiction book about the continued influence of the civil war and the confederacy on the american south.
Confederates in the attic chapter 3 summary.
Confederates in the attic is a non fiction book written by pulitzer prize winning journalist tony horwitz.
Horwitz states since my appearance in the carolinas scarcely a day has gone without some scrap of the common war showing up in the paper 71.
Horwitz opens confederates in the attic with an anecdote about his grandfather isaac moses perski who fled czarist russia as a teenage draft dodger 3 on his way to arriving in manhattan and beginning a new life as an immigrant in america.
South carolina shades of dim part 4 spotlights on horwitz s time in columbia the capital city of south carolina and the seething discussions on how the south should deal with recalling its legacy and confederate images.
Confederates in the attic summary.
Horwitz explores his deep interest in the american civil war and investigates the ties in the united states among citizens to a war that ended more than 130 years previously.
The book is a mixture of ethnography the study of a specific group of people in a specific place and travel writing where horwitz attempts to dive deeply into his childhood fascination for the american civil war by traveling through the deep south visiting confederate battlefields museums and monuments and interviewing the locals that he comes into contact with about their.
South carolina in the better half of the world chapter 3 finds horwitz in south carolina and it opens as he tours fort sumter the site of the first battle of the american civil war.