There was a common theme in two books I read in July. They weren’t books I read for pleasure. They were books I read because I knew I should read them. I needed to open my eyes.
I needed to remove those rose-colored glasses through which one sees old southern plantations like “Tara” of Gone With the Wind fame, where white slave owners and slaves were all just one big happy family. The only bad guys in most of those stories were the occasional evil-minded heavy-handed overseer.
That’s the fiction we’ve grown up reading. It’s the fiction we’ve grown up watching on TV and on the big silver screens in movie theaters. But it’s fiction.
There’s nothing particularly wrong in settling down to read Gone With the Wind, but it isn’t a history book. It’s fiction. Too often we let fiction color our perceptions of how things were “in the good old days.” They weren’t “good old days” for everyone.
It’s like watching reruns of The Andy Griffith Show or Father Knows Best and yearning for life to return to how it was in the 1950s and 1960s. But life wasn’t good for everyone in those decades. If you were in the white majority then in the United States, you probably have pretty good memories of those decades. If you are a person of color who grew up or were an adult in that era, your memories are probably tainted by incidents and even everyday occurrences that were meant to “keep you in your place.”
Two of the books I read in July were No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice, by Karen L. Cox and Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, by Isabel Wilkerson. Racial injustice is the common thread the two books share. They weren’t pleasant reading, but they were enlightening and enriching reading. I highly recommend both.
No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice, by Karen L. Cox
Karen L. Cox is a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. During the shut-down days of the Covid-19 pandemic, I heard her interviewed online. I immediately got on the waitlist at the library for her latest book, No Common Ground: Confederate Monuments and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice. Due to that same pandemic, the library was very slow to receive the book order. Nevertheless, it was well worth the wait.
Written by a history professor, the 178-page text is indexed and thoroughly annotated with source notes and references. There is an extensive bibliography.
As the opening words of the inside fold of the book jacket states, “When it comes to Confederate monuments, there is no common ground. Polarizing debates over their meaning have intensified into legislative maneuvering to preserve the statues, legal battles to remove them, and rowdy crowds taking matters into their own hands. These conflicts have raged for well over a century—but they’ve never been as intense as they are today.”
The day I started reading No Common Ground, July 9, 2021, was the day a video clip on the news on TV shows a crane removing a statue of Robert E. Lee sitting on his horse, Traveler, from its place in Richmond, Virginia. It was noted that a statue of “Stonewall” Jackson would come down next.
We’ve seen many such news reports over the last couple of years as more and more people are realizing that these statues that many of us thought of as just part of the landscape and markers of our history were, in fact, very offensive to our fellow citizens of color.
Dr. Cox’s book examines the history of Confederate monuments and the mindset of the generations of southerners who erected them. Her book brings that history forward to the points of disagreement those statues represent today.
The book explains how Ladies Memorial Associations sprang up throughout the former Confederate states immediately after the Civil War. They were groups of white southern women who led the way in raising awareness and money to bring home the bodies of many Confederate soldiers who had died on battlefields far from home. Theirs was seen as “holy work.”
Those organizations morphed into the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) in 1894. It was the UDC that is responsible for the majority of Confederate monuments. The organization’s main purpose was educating children about their revisionist version of the history of the Confederate States of America, and erecting ever-taller, ever-larger monuments in public places such as county courthouse lawns ran a close second.
As Jim Crow laws gained authority in the 1890s and the lynching of black citizens became more common, the UDC dedicated more and more monuments. Fiery speeches and big celebrations accompanied those dedication ceremonies and they drew huge crowds.
Robert E. Lee thought the constructing of great Confederate monuments was “antithetical to a peaceful reconciliation” after the Civil War, but some southerners were undeterred. Lee died in 1870, and as soon as Reconstruction ended in 1877 state legislatures got involved in building statues of Lee.
A 109-foot tall $36,474 (an estimated $945,000 in today’s dollars) monument to Lee was unveiled in 1884 in New Orleans at the World’s Industrial and Cotton Centennial Exposition. Not to be outdone, the city of Richmond unveiled its massive statue of Lee sitting atop his horse, Traveler, in 1890.
The Confederate monument building really came into its own around 1895 and continued until World War II, only interrupted during that time by the World War I years. Between 1900 and 1940, more than 550 Confederate monuments were erected.
No Common Ground doesn’t end there, but I’ll stop there. I wanted to share some of the things I learned about the history of the Confederate monuments that have been much in the news in the last several years as there’s been a push to tear them down. If you’ve paid attention, you already know about those recent events.
I read No Common Ground because I wanted to know the history of the Confederate monuments. The more I learn, the more I know there’s really no place for them in our world today. They were built more out of hate than honor. They were built as tangible symbols of white supremacy, and such symbols should not be tolerated today.
I hope I’ve shared enough from the book to make you want to read it. When you know better, you (should) do better.
Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, by Isabel Wilkerson
If you are serious about figuring out what’s at the root of our discontents in today’s society in the United States, read this book.
I’d never thought about our having a caste system in the United States. That was something they had in India, but not here! But the more I got into Isabel Wilkerson’s book, Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, the more I thought she made a very good point. We don’t call it a caste system, and we don’t like to talk about having a class system, but I believe Ms. Wilkerson is correct in her deductions after her extensive research.
This is a hard pill for most of us to swallow. We like to think of America as being a beacon of liberty and individual freedoms. Compared to many other nations, it is; however, follow Ms. Wilkerson as she methodically lays out her thesis and you will, possibly, also conclude that we have our own brand of a caste system here. It’s not as rigid and blatant as the caste system in India, but it is written on our souls.
Those of us who are Caucasian don’t want to be told we’re racist. Even the most “woke” and antiracists among us, though, must admit that we have enjoyed countless privileges that were and continue to be afforded us simply due to the light hues of our skin and the texture of our hair.
I shuddered as I read parts of Ms. Wilkerson’s book. She related stories of terror, abuse, torment, and murder that have occurred throughout our nation’s history – but were not included in those written histories. The shameful acts of discrimination and physical violence against people of color in the United States continue today. It is incumbent upon all of us to speak out against it.
Once you know injustices are happening, you simply can’t turn a blind eye. It’s easy to use the excuse, “What can one person do?” We must move beyond the excuses and find ways to fight injustice.
As many state legislatures in the United States are enacting laws to make it harder for people to vote, it is our obligation to make it known to lawmakers and our fellow citizens that this isn’t right.
Be an informed citizen. The state legislators who are pushing laws of voter suppression don’t advertise it. They usually work quietly and, literally, under the cover of darkness. Before you know it, it’s done. It’s the law.
They use that favorite lie that there is rampant voter fraud. The truth is that there is rampant voter suppression. Creating US Congressional districts “with surgical precision” as was done in North Carolina needs to be held up to the light. The only case of fraud perpetrated in the 2018 election in North Carolina was perpetrated by a candidate’s campaign – and that candidate was a member of the political party that cries first and loudest about voter fraud.
What will you say when your grandchildren ask you what you did to stop racial injustice?
Since my last blog post
I’ve received many supportive and conversation-starting comments about last Monday’s blog post. I appreciate the interest that post created and every comment.
I’ve studied setting in fiction writing – setting in general and rural pioneer setting in particular. I’m making my way through C.S. Lakin’s book, Layer Your Novel.
Until my next blog post
I plan to continue to study setting and scene construction.
I hope you have a good book to read. If you can get your hands on a copy of Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, by Isabel Wilkerson, I highly recommend it.
Janet
Thanks for your reviews of these enlightening books that I note with interest. I admire your dedication to educate yourself about Black history and the numerous ways Whites suppressed Blacks. I think it fascinating that Gen. Lee himself thought Civil War Confederate statues were a very bad idea. A book I’ve really enjoyed is Dr. Yaba Blay’s One Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race. The book has beautiful photos combined with personal interviews of Black people from the US and other countries. The book shows how for people myriad of skin tones, it is their lived cultural experience that determines their Black identity. Thanks for discussing these important topics.
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Thank you Janet. Your posts are always enlightening. For a broader view on Slavery across the millennia, I can recommend The Silk Roads. Very interesting read.
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Thank you, Chris. I’ve heard of The Silk Roads but never read it. I’ll add it to my To Be Read list. Thanks for the recommendation.
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Thank you for your kind words, Rebecca. Robert E. Lee has been such a revered figure in the South, I’m glad some of the truth about him is finally coming to light. Thank you for the recommendation of Dr. Yaba Blay’s book. I’ll definitely seek it out.
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Lee understood strategy and statues of Confederates were not a strategy to preserve peace, rather to represent enduring conflict. Dr. Blay’s book felt like a personal introduction into people’s lives and their racial and ethnic identities. Excellent book.
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Thank you for these excellent reviews, Janet. Caste has been on my radar for awhile now. Your review has helped move it up a few notches. Your blog provides an important service.
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My sister always says the same, some books is just there to open our eyes. Thanks Janet.
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Janet you for your kind words, Janet. Caste provides a new perspective on many things.
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When I think about Lee and the statues of him, I can’t help but think about John Knox. In the Reformation, Knox had all the statues removed from Edinburgh Cathedral. Now there’s a wooden statue of Knox in the cathedral! What makes that even more bizarre is that he’s buried under the cathedral’s parking lot. Makes you wonder about people, doesn’t it? LOL! I don’t know when I’ll get to Dr. Blay’s book. I’ve made a schedule for working my way through 18 books and workbooks about the craft of writing. If I can stay on schedule, it will take me until mid-February to get through all of them so I can re-outline and re-write my novel I feel like it’s now or never, since I’m 68 years old. I’m putting most reading for pleasure on hold.
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Exactly, Laleh! Your sister is wise.
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Great information and interesting books for sure! Thank you 😊
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I see you’re playing catch-up on your blog reading today. Thank you for reading all my posts and leaving so many helpful comments. I hope you’ve had a splendid vacation.
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Thank you Janet, and yes, for some reason that only WP knows, your posts do not appear in my reader…
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I don’t have a clue why that is. There are a couple of blogs I follow that don’t come in on my reader. It’s frustrating because these particular bloggers don’t blog with any regularity so it’s impossible to know when I need to check their sites. I appreciate your following my blog more than ever, knowing that.
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It’s always a pleasure Janet!
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Thank you, Janet. I was very impressed by your reviews here – in themselves very informative and thought provoking. Thank you for pointing us to these titles. I’m particularly interested in the Caste one by Wilkerson
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You’re quite welcome, Dawn. I hope you’ll get a chance to read Caste by Wilkerson. It really made me see a lot of things in a new light. I love books that challenge my thinking, and these two certainly did that. Thanks for taking time to leave a comment.
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