Introduction
Simon Lewis and Adam H. Domby 1
Whom Is Reconstruction For?
Bruce E. Baker 17
Implementing Public Schools: Competing Visions and Crises in Postemancipation Mobile, Alabama
Hilary N. Green 39
Reconstruction Justice: African American Police Officers in Charleston and New Orleans
Samuel Watts 57
1874: Self-Defense and Racial Empowerment in the Alabama Black Belt
Michael W. Fitzgerald 78
"They Mustered a Whole Company of Kuklux as Militia":
State Violence and Black Freedoms in Kentucky's Readjustment
Shannon M. Smith 96
A Woman of "Weak Mind": Gender, Race, and Mental Competency in the Reconstruction Era
Felicity Turner 121
Idealism versus Material Realities: Economic Woes for Northern African American Families
Holly A. Pinheiro, Jr. 143
"Works Meet for Repentance": Congressional Amnesty and Reconstructed Rebels
Brian K. Fennessy 159
Toward an International History of Reconstruction
Don H. Doyle 181
The Dream of a Rural Democracy:
US Reconstruction and Abolitionist Propaganda in Rio de Janeiro, 1880–1890
Sergio Pinto-Handler 212
Lessons from "Redemption": Memories of Reconstruction Violence in Colonial Policy
Adam H. Domby 232
Remembering War, Constructing Race Pride, Promoting Uplift:
Joseph T. Wilson and the Black Politics of Reconstruction and Retreat
Matthew E. Stanley 249
Fact, Fancy, and Nat Fuller's Feast in 1865 and 2015
Ethan J. Kytle 276
Acknowledgments 305
List of Contributors 307
Index 309