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Lost Cause of the Confederacy
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Viewing 91–120 of 266 results.
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Race, History, and Memories of a Virginia Girlhood
A historian looks back at the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow in her home state.
by
Drew Gilpin Faust
via
The Atlantic
on
July 18, 2019
Brazil’s Long, Strange Love Affair with the Confederacy Ignites Racial Tension
In Brazil, some descendants of defeated Confederate immigrants still believe the war for secession was a noble cause.
by
Jordan Brasher
via
The Conversation
on
May 6, 2019
The ‘Loyal Slave’ Photo That Explains the Northam Scandal
The governor’s yearbook picture, like many images before it, reinforces the belief that blacks are content in their oppression.
by
Kevin M. Levin
via
The Atlantic
on
February 13, 2019
Atlanta's Famed Cyclorama Mural Will Tell the Truth About the Civil War Once Again
One of the war's greatest battles was fought again and again on a spectacular canvas nearly 400 feet long.
by
Jack Hitt
via
Smithsonian
on
December 1, 2018
The Costs of the Confederacy
In the last decade, taxpayers have spent at least $40 million on Confederate monuments and groups that perpetuate racist ideology.
by
Brian Palmer
,
Seth Freed Wessler
via
Smithsonian
on
November 28, 2018
At 63, I Threw Away My Prized Portrait of Robert E. Lee
I was raised to venerate Lee the principled patriot—but I want no association with Lee the defender of slavery.
by
Stanley A. McChrystal
via
The Atlantic
on
October 23, 2018
Naming the Enslaved, Reconciling the Past in Memphis
The roll call for the names of 74 African Americans sold into slavery by Nathan Bedford Forrest in Memphis was solemn.
by
Hannah Baldwin
via
Southern Poverty Law Center
on
October 19, 2018
Not Even Trump Wants to Praise Robert E. Lee
Most of President Donald Trump's 20th-century predecessors expressed profound admiration for Confederate general Robert E. Lee.
by
Yoni Appelbaum
via
The Atlantic
on
October 15, 2018
The Environmental Roots of Jim Crow in Coastal South Carolina
On the origins of the Lost Cause of the Lowcountry.
by
Caroline Grego
via
Environmental History Now
on
September 13, 2018
What the Name "Civil War" Tells Us-- and Why it Matters
Today’s battles over Confederate iconography emerge, in part, out of the failure to address the centrality of slavery to the war.
by
Gaines M. Foster
via
Muster
on
September 11, 2018
Southerners Tore Down Silent Sam. Now Northerners Need to Tear Down Confederate Flags.
Each one flown outside the slave states amounts to an admission that the flag represents whiteness, not Southernness.
by
Alex Pareene
via
HuffPost
on
August 29, 2018
partner
The Missing Statues That Expose the Truth About Confederate Monuments
Why Confederacy supporters erased the legacy of one its most accomplished soldiers.
by
Kevin Waite
via
Made By History
on
August 29, 2018
partner
Why Some White Americans see Racial Equality as Oppression
White victimhood's roots in the Civil War.
by
Martha Hodes
via
Made By History
on
August 27, 2018
The Dramatic Fall of Silent Sam, UNC’s Confederate Monument
Protesters toppled the 1913 statue Monday, making it the latest Civil War memorial to be removed by government or demonstrators.
by
David A. Graham
via
The Atlantic
on
August 21, 2018
partner
Charlottesville Was About Memory, Not Monuments
Why our history educations must be better.
by
Julian Maxwell Hayter
via
Made By History
on
August 10, 2018
Pride and Prejudice? The Americans Who Fly the Confederate Flag
A listening tour in Mississippi asks flag supporters why they still support a symbol that represents pain, division and difficult history.
by
Donna Ladd
via
The Guardian
on
August 6, 2018
How Charles Koch Is Helping Neo-Confederates Teach College Students
The Koch Foundation is often praised for its higher-ed funding, but the money is going to some radical professors.
by
Alex Kotch
via
The Nation
on
March 21, 2018
Reclaiming Stone Mountain From the Alt-Right
How Stone Mountain could become a battlefield where neo-Confederates from across the country make their last stand.
by
Tony Rehagen
via
Pacific Standard
on
February 14, 2018
The Fight Over Virginia’s Confederate Monuments
How the state’s past spurred a racial reckoning.
by
Benjamin Wallace-Wells
via
The New Yorker
on
December 4, 2017
The Painful History of a Confederate Monument Tells Itself
Haunting archival footage of Stone Mountain's creation.
by
Emily Buder
via
The Atlantic
on
December 1, 2017
original
The Future of our Confederate Monuments Rests With the Kids
The perspectives of older Americans have dominated the debate. It's time we pay more attention to what younger people have to say.
by
Kevin M. Levin
on
November 30, 2017
I Grew Up as a Black Southerner Idolizing Robert E. Lee
I didn't know the Confederate general owned slaves. I didn't even know he was part of the Confederacy.
by
Issac J. Bailey
via
Vice
on
November 2, 2017
partner
The North Tried Compromise. The South Chose War.
The South's insistence upon protecting and spreading slavery caused the Civil War.
by
Carole Emberton
via
Made By History
on
November 1, 2017
Let’s Relitigate the Civil War
There can be no "compromise" with the false view of America's past from Trumpists and pop historians alike.
by
Jeet Heer
via
The New Republic
on
November 1, 2017
John Kelly Calls Robert E. Lee An ‘Honorable Man’ and Says ‘Lack of Compromise’ Caused The Civil War
The White House chief of staff set off a firestorm Monday after his comments on the Confederate general.
by
Eli Rosenberg
,
Cleve R. Wootson Jr.
via
Washington Post
on
October 31, 2017
How Southern Socialites Rewrote Civil War History
The United Daughters of the Confederacy altered the South’s memory of the Civil War.
by
Coleman Lowndes
via
Vox
on
October 25, 2017
How Theaters and TV Networks are Changing the Way They Show Gone With the Wind
After almost 80 years, America is finally rethinking how it screens its favorite movie.
by
Aisha Harris
via
Slate
on
October 22, 2017
A Senator Speaks Out Against Confederate Monuments… in 1910
Alone in his stand, Weldon Heyburn despised that Robert E. Lee would be memorialized with a statue in the U.S. Capitol
by
Cynthia R. Greenlee
via
Smithsonian
on
October 18, 2017
A Senator Speaks Out Against Confederate Monuments… in 1910
Alone in his stand, Weldon Heyburn despised that Robert E. Lee would be memorialized with a statue in the U.S. Capitol.
by
Cynthia R. Greenlee
via
Smithsonian
on
October 18, 2017
Beyond Monuments: African Americans Contesting Civil War Memory
Black resistance to Lost Cause mythology has been a constant of the past 150 years.
by
Ashleigh Lawrence-Sanders
via
Black Perspectives
on
October 16, 2017
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