Introduction: The South's other "Other War" / Matthew L. Downs and M. Ryan Floyd
" A diarrhea of plans and constipation of action": The influence of Alabama cotton farmers, merchants, and brokers on Anglo-American diplomacy during the First World War, 1914-1915 / M. Ryan Floyd
Manhood, duty, and service: Conscription in North Carolina during the First World War / James Hall
World War I and South Carolina's council of defense: Its campaign to root out disloyalty, 1917-1918 / Fritz Hamer
Food soldiers: Rural Southerners and food regulation during World War I / Angela Jill Cooley
The call to duty in the old North state: Patriotism, service, and North Carolina women's colleges during the Great War / Kathelene McCarty Smith and Keith Phelan Gorman
The Great War and expanded equality?: Black Carolinians test boundaries / Janet G. Hudson
"The race's greatest opportunity since Emancipation": The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Great War, and the South / Lee Sartain
Cotton's chaotic home front: The First World War and the Southern textile industry / Annette Cox
"The battle for commerce is begun": Building the Port of Mobile, Alabama, after World War I / Matthew L. Downs.