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This NC Voices series examined how the Civil War affects people in North Carolina 150 years after the start of the war. We looked at the legacy of the war and how we remember it and how it shapes our identity as Southerners.North Carolina Voices: Civil WarThe series included a series of reports during Morning Edition and a series of discussions on The State of Things. The series aired the weeks of June 13th and June 20th, 2011.Additionally, as part of the series: short “family stories" to placed throughout the program schedule those weeks. Those included personal stories of the war handed down through families or historians answering listener questions.

The Homefront is the Battlefront

Movie still from the film, ''Gone with the Wind''

The Civil War is often referred to as the last war fought on American soil. Since then, we fight wars over seas and we watch the battles play out on TV or the Internet. For black and white women living in the American South, the Civil War was fought all around them, but the true enemies were poverty, hunger and despair. For those women, the battlefront was not a distant idea because the battlefront was the homefront. As part of our series, “North Carolina Voices: The Civil War,” Thavolia Glymph and Laura Edwards join host Frank Stasio to discuss what life was like for women in North Carolina during the war.

Glymph is an associate professor of African and African American Studies and History at Duke University and she is the author of the book, “Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household.” (Cambridge University Press/2008). Laura Edwards is a professor of History at Duke University and author of the books, “The People and Their Peace: Legal Culture and the Transformation of Inequality in the Post-Revolutionary South” (University of North Carolina Press/2009) and “Scarlett Doesn't Live Here Anymore: Southern Women in the Civil War Era” (University of Illinois Press/2000).

Longtime NPR correspondent Frank Stasio was named permanent host of The State of Things in June 2006. A native of Buffalo, Frank has been in radio since the age of 19. He began his public radio career at WOI in Ames, Iowa, where he was a magazine show anchor and the station's News Director.
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