In addition, "American Chronicle" examines the role mass sickness and disease has played in U.S. history. While many historical appraisals highlight the devastation mass disease had on indigenous peoples, scant attention has been paid to the fact that most deaths in American conflicts were the result of various maladies. For example, less than twenty percent of all American deaths in the Mexican War were battlefield related, while eighty-three to eighty-six percent were caused by disease, particularly dysentery, yellow fever, malaria, and smallpox. In the Civil War, two-thirds of all fatalities were the result of disease.
Finally, this study integrates social history-the role fashion, music, and literature played in shaping the American perspective-into this exceedingly well documented "warts and all" narrative.
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