[Last
October I had a lot of fun sharing and AmericanStudying some of my recent
reads, and it brought out great responses and nominations for a crowd-sourced
weekend post. So this year I wanted to do the same, and would love to hear
what you’ve been reading for another weekend list!]
On one of my
favorite primary source discoveries for my forthcoming book.
As I wrote in this
update post on Of Thee I Sing: The Contested History of American Patriotism (due out in January 2021—watch this space for more info!), one of the best parts of
researching and writing that book was uncovering and sharing some relatively
unknown historical texts, figures, and moments (“unknown” is always a fraught
concept when it comes to history, but at the very least these are histories
that do not occupy prominent roles in our collective memories). I hope that
every chapter features at least one or two of them, but perhaps my favorite is
part of the Civil War chapter: Susie King Taylor’s memoir, Reminiscences
of My Life in Camp with the 33rd United States Colored Troops Late 1st
South Carolina Volunteers (1902).
That Documenting the American South
introduction to Taylor’s book by scholar Meredith
Malburne details Taylor’s striking life, from a childhood in slavery to her
escape during the Civil War (when she was just 14 years old), her wartime work
as a nurse (still a teenager), and her extensive experiences of both the
Reconstruction South, the post-Reconstruction North, and the arc of late 19th
century American history. As Malburne notes, we know much of that history
through Taylor’s own writing, which of course makes it somewhat more uncertain (or
at least shaded by her personal perspective and biases, as any personal
narrative is) but also reflects the vital historical and cultural role that
such memoirs can play, the way they portray (as Thomas
Wentworth Higginson puts it in his Introduction) “the plain record of
simple lives, led in stormy periods.” That’s more than enough reason to read
Taylor’s short and engaging book (available in full at that same site)—which
I’ll leave you to go do!
Crowd-sourced
post this weekend,
Ben
PS. So one more
time: what do you think? Recent reads you’d share for the weekend post?
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