Late in 2012, I came out of
the Lincoln movie with two historical mysteries to solve:
- How
did the two parties switch places regarding the South, white supremacy,
and civil rights? In Lincoln’s day, a radical Republican was an
abolitionist, and when blacks did get the vote, they almost unanimously
voted Republican. Today, the archetypal Republican is a Southern white,
and blacks are almost all Democrats. How did American politics get from
there to here?
- One of the movie’s themes was how heavily the
war’s continuing carnage weighed on Lincoln. (It particularly came
through during Grant’s guided tour of the Richmond battlefield.) Could
any cause, however lofty, justify this incredible slaughter? And yet, I
realized, Lincoln was winning. What must the Confederate leaders have
been thinking, as an even larger percentage of their citizens died, as
their cities burned, and as the accumulated wealth of generations
crumbled? Where was their urge to end this on any terms, rather than
wait for complete destruction?
The first question took some work, but yielded readily to patient googling. I wrote up the answer in “
A Short History of White Racism in the Two-Party System“.
The second turned out to be much deeper than I expected, and set off a
reading project that has eaten an enormous amount of my time over the
last two years.
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