Enduring Legacy
Rhetoric and Ritual of the Lost Cause
Publication Year: 2012
Published by: The University of Alabama Press
Cover
Title Page, Copyright Page
Contents
Download PDF (62.2 KB)
pp. vii-
Introduction
Download PDF (124.7 KB)
pp. ix-xvii
In the mid-1990s, while working on an anthology of speeches from the civil rights movement, I began to have the feeling of déjà vu. A few years earlier, I had edited a two-volume collection of speeches by southern orators from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and many of the themes...
1. Rhetoric, Celebration, and Ritual: Building a Collective Memory in the Postwar South
Download PDF (141.0 KB)
pp. 1-13
Perhaps in no other Western nation of modern times has the practice of public speaking played such a predominant role in the life of a nation as in the United States. Beginning with the earliest Puritan sermons and continuing into the twenty-first century, much of the history of America can be read...
2. Remembering the Confederacy: Ceremony in the Postwar South, 1865–1920s
Download PDF (206.2 KB)
pp. 14-39
Since before the beginning of recorded history, the human race has acknowledged the need to celebrate and honor the important aspects of culture— its religion, its heroes, its victories, and its defeats; archaeological findings and anthropological research conclusively show this human trait...
3. The Road to Secession and War: The Oratorical Defense of the Confederacy and the Old South
Download PDF (174.2 KB)
pp. 40-61
There was never a Confederate Memorial Day celebration, a Confederate veterans’ reunion, or a Confederate monument dedication without the program including at least one oration by a local dignitary, often a Confederate general or other high-ranking officer, or a local soldier who was always portrayed...
4. Creating the Myths of the War: Martyrs and Scapegoats of the Confederacy
Download PDF (246.1 KB)
pp. 62-95
Concurrently with their defense of the right of secession and the rights of states, Lost Cause orators defined, described, and defended the mythology of the Civil War. Southerners had not believed they could lose in their struggles with the North, as they believed God was on their side and that they were...
5. Creating the Myths of Reconstruction, Redemption, Reconciliation, and the New and Future South: The Rest of the Story
Download PDF (169.4 KB)
pp. 96-115
Lost Cause rhetoric included not only defense, glorification, and justification of the Confederacy and the Old South and its war heroes, but also the clearly connected and relevant mythology of what happened to the region after Appomattox. The Civil War may have been the great epic event of southern...
6. The Persistence of a Myth: The Lost Cause in the Modern South
Download PDF (212.6 KB)
pp. 116-146
There is no question that Confederate ceremonial events and the rituals and rhetoric that created the cult of the Lost Cause made a deep and abiding impression on the white citizens of the post–Civil War South. A typical example of these celebrations and their impact on their communities occurred...
Notes
Download PDF (137.2 KB)
pp. 147-163
Bibliography
Download PDF (158.4 KB)
pp. 165-182
Index
Download PDF (279.9 KB)
pp. 183-190
E-ISBN-13: 9780817385811
Print-ISBN-13: 9780817317522
Publication Year: 2012
Edition: 1


