Th e Journ al of the Civil W ar Era
Transcription
Th e Journ al of the Civil W ar Era
The Journal of the Civil War Era JCWE 5.2 2nd pages.indd i volume 5, number 2 june 2015 Contents Editor’s Note william blair, 193 Tom Watson Brown Book Award ari kelman Remembering Sand Creek on the Eve of Its Sesquicentennial, 195 Articles cathal smith Second Slavery, Second Landlordism, and Modernity: A Comparison of Antebellum Mississippi and Nineteenth-Century Ireland, 204 d. h. dilbeck “The Genesis of This Little Tablet with My Name”: Francis Lieber and the Wartime Origins of General Orders No. 100, 231 millington w. bergeson-lockwood “We Do Not Care Particularly about the Skating Rinks”: African American Challenges to Racial Discrimination in Places of Public Amusement in Nineteenth-Century Boston, Massachusetts, 254 Review Essay scott reynolds nelson Who Put Their Capitalism in My Slavery?, 289 Book Reviews, 311 Books Received, 343 Notes on Contributors, 346 4/15/2015 5:01:51 PM *****If you are not already a subscriber,***** please visit our subscription page. The Journal of the Civil War Era also is available electronically, by subscription, at Project Muse. Loathing Lincoln: An American Tradition from the Civil War to the Present. By John McKee Barr. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2014. Pp. 484. Cloth, $35.95.) As Abraham Lincoln drew his last breath, Edwin Stanton somberly observed, “Now he belongs to the ages.” So does Lincoln’s reputation, which has ebbed and flowed with the shifting tides of popular and scholarly opinion about the Civil War itself. Each generation has tried to forge its own “usable Lincoln,” an amalgam of contemporary historical scholarship, political debate, popular culture, and—increasingly—ideological intrigue. Between the Civil War era’s centennial, which produced Thomas J. Pressly’s seminal Americans Interpret Their Civil War (1954), and the war’s sesquicentennial, which has brought us John McKee Barr’s Loathing Lincoln, this evolving “Lincoln image” has undergone unprecedented scholarly scrutiny. Arguably the finest historiographical treatment of Lincoln’s shifting academic persona is Merrill D. Peterson’s Lincoln in American Memory (1994). Barry Schwartz’s two-volume examination of evolving popular views, Abraham Lincoln and the Forge of National Memory (2000) and Abraham Lincoln in the Post-Heroic Era: History and Memory in Late Twentieth-Century America (2008), reaches well beyond scholarly histories and biographies to assimilate monuments, b o o k r e v i e w s 335 JCWE 5.2 2nd pages.indd 335 4/15/2015 5:02:05 PM fiction, poetry, portraits, caricature, politics, and films into a more inclusive and diffuse “collective memory” of the man and his meaning. A newly fashionable, and often whimsical, journalistic approach takes readers on a personal journey of discovery across the American landscape in search of an elusive “real Lincoln,” from Jan Morris’s Lincoln: A Foreigner’s Quest (2000), to James A. Percoco’s Summers with Lincoln: Looking for the Man in the Monuments (2008), to Sarah Vowell’s Assassination Vacation (2005). Through it all, this multifaceted “imagined Lincoln” has remained a fallible yet robustly unifying figure—a venerable, if supremely malleable, American icon. Now, Loathing Lincoln takes us on a less familiar and more sinister journey through America’s collective memory, exposing the darker side of the scholarly, popular, journalistic, and political uses—and misuses— of the Lincoln image. Barr limits his study to exclusively negative representations of Lincoln, which he views as ideologically charged attacks on the essential values that Lincoln espoused and that Union victory in the Civil War solidified. Leaving aside Lincoln’s admirers and even his wellmeaning critics, Barr explores what Don Fehrenbacher dubbed, a generation ago, the “anti-Lincoln tradition” in American culture. By definition, Barr’s “Lincoln loathers” seek to discredit him as part of a broader effort to repudiate what he stood for—emancipation, equality, opportunity for all, national unity, an activist state, and a more inclusive society. While the familiar Lincoln image portrays him as a potential source of unity, Barr’s subjects threaten to polarize and divide. “With few exceptions,” he writes, “loathing for Lincoln has meant loathing for an expanded notion of freedom and equality” (332). Too many of Lincoln’s defenders, at their own peril, have dismissed his detractors as an irrelevant fringe whose contrarian views scarcely merit scholarly attention, let alone a concerted response. By contrast, Loathing Lincoln’s paramount virtue is Barr’s determination to take the Lincoln haters seriously, exposing their dissent as a carefully constructed “alternative narrative” whose oversimplified but internally consistent version of events represents a parallel history of America that appeals to a mounting audience at both ends of the ideological spectrum (329). At every step of his analysis, Barr relentlessly searches for Lincoln baiting across a broad spectrum of popular media—books, book reviews, newspaper editorials, letters to the editor, memorials, newsletters churned out by religious institutes and conservative think tanks, grade school textbooks, public opinion polls, and television commentary. Diving into every debate, he confronts each on its own substantive and intellectual terms and marshals the relevant evidence to offer an effective rebuttal. 336 j o u r n a l o f t h e c i v i l wa r e r a , volum e 5, i s s u e 2 JCWE 5.2 2nd pages.indd 336 4/15/2015 5:02:05 PM He concludes that the bulk of Lincoln detractors are conservatives, who view Lincoln as the “Great Centralizer,” fomenting a war and ending slavery merely to establish an overbearing federal government whose primary mission was the suppression of states’ rights and individual liberties. Meanwhile, a growing minority of liberals see him as a reluctant and even cynical emancipator who abandoned the former slaves, forswore civil rights, and set the stage for America’s emergence as an imperialistic power. In a comprehensive effort to expose and refute its increasingly sophisticated appropriation of the Lincoln image, Barr methodically traces the elaboration of the anti-Lincoln tradition from its roots in the Civil War through five distinct periods of history, during which its architects have altered their arguments to address contemporary political, social, and intellectual issues. The early twentieth century, for example, brought a shift from the Lost Cause to a new concern with American imperialism as one of the Civil War’s legacies. Between the world wars, southerners turned from political to constitutional arguments that appealed to a broader national rather than narrowly sectional constituency. With the rise of the Republican Right, Lincoln bashing entered the mainstream of American political debate, prompting Barr to caution that “attacking and altering the image of Lincoln today is a long-term strategy for changing the nation’s historical narrative, its orientation, and the nature of American political culture” (14). Barr’s thoughtful reassessment of the anti-Lincoln tradition is thorough, tenacious, and timely. Above all, Loathing Lincoln opens a critical window into an increasingly potent and popular dimension of the Lincoln image that Civil War scholars have for too long preferred to keep shuttered. Kenneth J. Winkle kenneth j. winkle is Thomas C. Sorenson Professor of American History at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln and author of Lincoln’s Citadel: The Civil War in Washington, DC (W. W. Norton, 2013). b o o k r e v i e w s 337 JCWE 5.2 2nd pages.indd 337 4/15/2015 5:02:05 PM