Answer:Americans wrote, published, and read a great deal about the war as it was going on and in the years that immediately followed. This literature invested the violence and trauma of the Civil War with meaning.
Explanation:Drawing a firm line at 1865 may have had another effect as well: encouraging us to look away from literature on the war itself and on its immediate aftermath. The traditional American literary canon often skips from American Renaissance figures of the 1850s to late-century realists like Henry James and Edith Wharton. Yet Americans wrote, published, and read a great deal about the war as it was going on and in the years that immediately followed. Civil War literary culture included a wide variety of both popular and highbrow forms, from news of the frontlines to accounts of emancipation to patriotic songs and poems as well as countless works of fiction. This literature invested the violence and trauma of the Civil War with meaning. It helped Americans on both sides of the conflict make sense of the war and its effects.
Answer:
because their actions do not match their words
Explanation:
A word that takes the place of a noun. e.g. she he, they, it, I.
e.g #1
the name "Katy" is a noun but you can replace it with a pronoun and say "she". Katy went to the shop// She went to the shop.
e.g #2
The name of an object is a noun e.g "ball" but you can replace it with a pronoun and say "it". The ball bounced// It bounced.