Abstract

Jewish children singing Dixie: The toll of the Confederate Monuments as seen by a Jew, a native southerner, and an art historian

Highlights

  • Peer Review: This article has been peer reviewed through the journal’s standard double blind peer-review, where both the reviewers and authors are anonymised during review

  • I have thought a lot about the subject since I needed to discuss the issue with my students in the City University of New York

  • I lived on Margaret Mitchell Drive and attended Margaret Mitchell Elementary School, proudly named after the bestselling author of Gone with the Wind, the 1936 novel set in Georgia during the Civil War and Reconstruction Era

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Summary

Introduction

Peer Review: This article has been peer reviewed through the journal’s standard double blind peer-review, where both the reviewers and authors are anonymised during review. ‘Jewish children singing Dixie: The toll of the Confederate Monuments as se native southerner, and an art historian.’ Jewish Historical Studies, 2017, 49(1): 2, pp. Open Access: Jewish Historical Studies is a peer-reviewed open access journal.

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