[On October 12th,
1870, Robert
E. Lee died—but not before the post-war
deification of Lee was already well underway. So this week I’ll
AmericanStudy that process and other aspects of Confederate memory, leading up
to a special post on a great recent book on the subject!]
On three poems
that illustrate the evolution of Confederate memory.
1)
Robert E. Lee, or
Heroes of the South (1876): Mississippi Confederate veteran and
neo-Confederate, white supremacist Reconstruction lawyer Lynch’s first published
literary work reflects that ongoing post-war deification of Lee, not only in
the text’s details but in its status as a national bestseller. Lynch turns Lee
into a classical, epic hero, and one who embodies the ideal legacy of the U.S.
(despite of course leading armies against it); all of which is clearly and concisely
illustrated by one sentence from the “Summarium” before the start of Canto I: “He
lands on an island, where an old Revolutionary soldier predicts to him his
fate, and, conditionally, that of his country.”
2)
Redpath,
or the Ku Klux Tribunal (1877): Lee
uses Civil War history to make the case for its post-war, neo-Confederate
perspective, but in his next published poem Lynch developed those contemporary
white supremacist arguments much more overtly. He did so through a particularly
insidious choice of protagonist and plot: Redpath, an aide to a Radical
Republican Congressman, is sent to the South to investigate the KKK for the ongoing Congressional
hearings into the domestic terrorist organization; but instead his
experiences convert him entirely to the KKK’s perspective, and he comes back to
Washington to make the case for why the Klan is necessary and vital in this
post-war moment. Long before Thomas W. Dixon and Birth of a Nation and Gone with the Wind, Lynch paved the
way for such cultural celebrations of the KKK.
3)
“Columbia
Saluting the Nations” (1893): Lynch’s final published poem was by far his
most prominent, as it and he were chosen as the official salutation for the
1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago. The poem itself includes no overt
neo-Confederate sentiments, advancing instead the kind of national celebration
you’d expect for that occasion. But that’s precisely the point—that by the
1890s, a Confederate veteran, white supremacist Reconstruction lawyer, and
author of poems like Lee and Redpath could be chosen to serve in this
ostensibly unifying national role, a reflection of just how fully this
neo-Confederate perspective and narrative had come to dominate American culture
and society by the end of the 19th century.
Next memories
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other aspects of Confederate or Civil War memory you’d highlight?
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