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Banned
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
Posts: 8,795
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De-Demonizing the South - a book review
[quote]De-Demonizing the South
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr. Clyde N. Wilson, Defending Dixie: Essays in Southern History and Culture (Columbia, S.C.: Foundation for American Education, 2006). Southerners have been so effectively demonized, both in American history and American popular culture, that not only the left but even a certain brand of conservative and libertarian will run for cover when the subject is raised, or even add their own voices to the establishment chorus against the South. (Wouldn’t want to be ranked among the nonrespectables, you understand.) These critics doubtless prefer not to be reminded that major figures in American conservatism always had an affinity for the South, or that Lord Acton had a sympathetic exchange of letters with Robert E. Lee. Murray Rothbard – Mr. Libertarian – supported states’ rights from the beginning of his political activism in the late 1940s, and the wonderful Liberty Fund published The Southern Essays of Richard M. Weaver, which found a great deal of value in Southern civilization. It is not an edifying spectacle to observe supposedly independent thinkers slavishly repeating whatever the mainstream – which they normally pride themselves on their willingness to confront – seems to want to hear about the South. I myself became interested in the South as a result of two factors. First, I took both of Donald Fleming’s American intellectual history courses at Harvard in the early 1990s. There I first encountered I’ll Take My Stand, the 1930 agrarian manifesto written by the Twelve Southerners. Although I disagreed with some of it I assuredly profited from reading it, and I subsequently became much more open-minded about the South. (When I first entered college I was a politically correct idiot when it came to the South – oddly enough, it took a Harvard professor to draw me out of that prejudice.) Second, I had the privilege of attending the 1993 William E. Massey, Sr., Lectures, an annual series at Harvard delivered that year by the accomplished and celebrated historian Eugene Genovese. When Genovese, historically a man of the left, spoke with something other than moralizing contempt about the Southern tradition, his audience was shocked, though I myself grew more intrigued than ever. (Genovese later observed that when you address the question of Southern history before a Southern audience they’ll call you on every misplaced semicolon. But when you do so before the Ivy League? "Don’t worry. Nobody is going to know anything.") Naturally, after releasing my Politically Incorrect Guide to American History I got all sorts of unsolicited diagnoses as to why I had this sympathy for the South: I obviously favored slavery and all manner of oppression. (Hardly anyone who says these things is actually stupid enough to believe them, of course; they are uttered for the sole purpose of character assassination.) No amount of protest could change the minds of all these people who had never met me or read more than three sentences of my work, so I figured it was pointless to bother. Clyde Wilson, who is professor emeritus of history at the University of South Carolina and editor of the Papers of John C. Calhoun, has never particularly cared about the predictable barbs that come from the quarters of fashionable opinion. He has managed, nevertheless, to win considerable professional respect for his work simply because it is so good. Eugene Genovese has even called him one of the top ten Southern historians in America, not that any of this matters to the professional haters who make careers out of smearing and hounding decent gentlemen like Clyde. Much of the time we greet the release of a new book with apathy: we have too much to read as it is, we don’t want to spend the money, whatever. It would be a terrible injustice to do so this time: Defending Dixie: Essays in Southern History and Culture is an outstanding and absorbing book, in which Wilson gives us a small taste of the breadth and depth of his knowledge of American history, culture, literature, and more. He effortlessly parries the typical accusations against the South. One of the book’s observations is that for a long time after the war a gentlemanly truce held between North and South: "For our part, Southerners agreed, in exchange for a little respect, that we were glad that the Union had not been broken up and that we would be loyal Americans ever after, something which we have proved a thousand-fold since…. And both agreed that the War had been a great tragedy with good and bad on both sides, a great suffering out of which had emerged a better and stronger United States." That truce having been established, no one felt the need to heap abuse on Southern symbols. Wilson writes, "I have seen a photograph of Franklin D. Roosevelt making a speech before a huge Confederate battle flag. Harry Truman picked the romantic equestrian painting of Lee and Jackson for the lobby of his Presidential Library. Churchill wrote admiringly of Confederates in his History of the English Speaking Peoples. Gone with the Wind, book and movie, was loved by audiences worldwide. If you look at the Hollywood movies and also the real pictures from World War II, you will see battle flags painted on U.S. fighter planes and flying over Marine tents in New Guinea." Those days are long gone. That even Jimmy Carter could treat Confederate symbols with a modicum of respect, while the allegedly "conservative" Dick Cheney refused to attend a congressman’s funeral if the battle flag was to be waved or "Dixie" played, reminds us of the relentlessly leftward drift of standard American conservatism, to say nothing of American society at large, that has occurred since then. Lincoln himself loved "Dixie," calling it "one of the best tunes I ever heard"; on April 8, 1865, he asked a band to play it, declaring that Southerners should now "be free to hear it again." Good thing our wise vice president put that softie in his place. In Wilson’s view, the major players in the ongoing anti-southern campaign are not simply misguided people of good will who can be won over by appeals to reason and history. "The people who want to suppress our symbols are not friendly folks who will cease and desist if we politely tell them the War was not all about slavery and that we are today good and loyal Americans who only want to honor our heritage. These people don’t know what you are talking about when you mention heritage, the recognition of your own forebears. They are not interested in a balanced weighing of the evidence of history. For them history is an abstraction and a weapon of power over others." (Even the ridiculous term "neo-Confederate," which makes no sense and describes no one I have ever met, is another case of typical commie agitprop, in which one’s opponents are made to appear loathsome on the basis of an ideological label not of their own choosing.) And finally: Quote:
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Banned
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Travelers Rest, South Carolina
Posts: 8,795
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PART TWO
Quote:
Last edited by fastpat; 03-11-2007 at 07:34 PM.. |
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Registered
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Such BS!!!
"When we moved down South last year my wife and I knew from experience that the people would be nicer, but we had no idea just how much friendlier race relations were down here as well." It’s so nice now with blacks and white living in harmony in the south. Everyone loves each other now! Each morning we all raise the confederate flag and sing Dixie while holding hands. Such BS!!!!
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David 2015 Audi S3 1988 Carrera Coupe (gone and miss her) |
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