The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History Audiobook By Gary W. Gallagher - editor, Alan T. Nolan - editor cover art

The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History

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The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History

By: Gary W. Gallagher - editor, Alan T. Nolan - editor
Narrated by: Keith McCarthy
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Was the Confederacy doomed from the start in its struggle against the superior might of the Union? Did its forces fight heroically against all odds for the cause of states’ rights? In reality, these suggestions are an elaborate and intentional effort on the part of Southerners to rationalize the secession and the war itself. Unfortunately, skillful propagandists have been so successful in promoting this romanticized view that the Lost Cause has assumed a life of its own. Misrepresenting the war’s true origins and its actual course, the myth of the Lost Cause distorts our national memory.

In The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History, nine historians describe and analyze the Lost Cause, identifying ways in which it falsifies history - creating a volume that makes a significant contribution to Civil War historiography.

The book is published by Indiana University Press.

©2000 Indiana University Press (P)2018 Redwood Audiobooks
American Civil War Historiography Civil War Military War English Civil War
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Critic reviews

"These essays are well reasoned and timely...will be a valuable addition to Civil War collections." (Booklist)

"The Lost Cause...is a tangible and influential phenomenon in American culture and this book provides an excellent source for anyone seeking to explore its various dimensions." (Southern Historian)

What listeners say about The Myth of the Lost Cause and Civil War History

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Excellent collection

This excellent coverage of the CSA’s formulation of the “lost cause” approach to the complete destruction of a new 19th century nation is a must read for anyone interested in the 2+ decades after Appomattox. Highly recommend!

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Really good intro for me into Lost Cause thinking

Recognize as the use of Myth implies this book comes from position of opposing Lost Cause thinking. For me it did a really good job of introducing the entire concept. I'm pretty sure Lost Cause followers probably hate this book.

I debated between 4 and 5 stars, as I found content good but would have liked accompanying PDF documents for the many references made to other sources and a few references to battlefield maps.

I would recommend this highly, but also feel I need to followup with more books about Lieutenant General James Longstreet. Pretty sure I bought a biography about him at a National Battlefield park but after two moves no idea where it might be.

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A story that needs to be told

It is amazing that so many Americans still cling to such insane beliefs about the causes of the Civil War. These beliefs serve to reinforce the notion that those fighting did so for honorable reasons and that they should be praised and remembered because of their valor. Once you realize that this couldn't be further from the truth... they may have fought with valor but that they weren't fighting for noble reasons, like to preserve some glorified notion of the southern way of life... that they were indeed fighting to preserve slavery... that makes it harder to justify keeping up the statues of their generals and so forth.

The essays contained in this book are fascinating and provide an important reminder about what they war was all about.

The narrator keeps a serious tone and is engaged throughout and has a conversational tone that is easy to listen to.

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Mostly hits in this collection

I enjoyed most of the essays in this collection.One in particular stood out - the one on Confederate General Pickett's wife, LaSalle Corbell Pickett. It goes into her life after her husband's death and it is filled with crazy details about how she became famous for writing loosely veiled fictional accounts of her and her husband's lives. She met her husband at a very early age, proudly considering herself to be a "child bride." It was creepy. She was a fascinating person.

A couple of other standouts were the chapters on Grant and the one on confederate soldier reunions in the decades following the war. Both included lots interesting bits I didn't know much, or in the case of the reunions, anything about. One or two of them didn't hold my attention as much, but overall, the collection was interesting and worthwhile.

Strong narration.

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Putting down "The Great Pro-Slavery Rebellion"

I recall early in my grammar school days, growing up in a largely integrated suburb just outside Washington, DC, in the 1970's, being taught what I can now recognize to be the introduction to Lost Cause propaganda. Curious students, like myself and friends, looking to understand deeper meaning, were easily lured into the trap. It started as an exercise in semantics, that a "Civil War" is one in which the control of a single, existing government was in conflict, therefore not applicable to the events of 1861-1865. Seemed a reasonable enough idea, especially to children of elementary school age. "The War Between the States" was an altogether unappealing alternative, but when it got "The War of Northern Aggression", we were captivated by the idea that we had stumbled upon something new, we were in possession of a long hidden truth. Of course, we must have been lied to by historians. Hadn't we been watching images from Vietnam every night, and Watergate events unfolding? Maybe it was a perfect storm of Confederate apologia and distrust of the American government, but it was compelling to a 10 year old. And it took a long time to discover it was just pure hokum. Unfortunately, many in my own family, Northern by birth, Southern in retirement, still cling to it.

The example provided early in this series of essays on the myth of the lost cause is the best, most honest name yet put forward for the conflict, "The Great Pro-Slavery Rebellion". It's the fact, plain and simple.

Perhaps most importantly, particularly for Southerners who still hold firm to this myth of the lost cause, nobody here (at least not in these essays, or in this review) is claiming that the North had moral superiority in racial matters, other than the single issue of the institution of slavery. And to be fair, a lot of the anti-slavery sentiment was rooted in economic rationale rather than purely moral conviction. Then, as now, racism is a scourge in all areas, regardless of boundaries.

I'd recommend a book by Edward H. Bonekemper III, with a similar title. It carries a lot of the same information, perhaps with a more comprehensive theme, as this audiobook is a collection of a several essays related to specific aspects of the Lost Cause mythology. Both thoroughly debunk any Confederate apologists' argument as to the motivation for war by the South.

1) Slavery was not in decline. In fact, the oft stated rationalization that slavery would die a natural death in its own time is, in its way, even a more damning indictment of the Confederacy. It implies they knew it is immoral, yet wished to wring out as much cash as possible before acceding to decency.

2) States' rights was never an issue the South really cared about. Support for a Fugitive Slave Act requiring non-slave owning states return runaway slaves, against their own convictions, puts a lie to that claim.

3) Claims of superior manpower and machinery in the Union, have been grossly exaggerated. And as is rightly pointed out in the essays, the Confederacy merely needed to maintain its position, without any requirement for attack, to achieve victory, while the Union required a decisive defeat of their opponents. A considerable advantage to start for the South. Confederate victory was attainable, and perhaps probable with the assistance of European alliances. But that would have required abandoning their peculiar institution of slavery as part of the agreement. Even more evidence that it was all about slavery.

4) Robert E. Lee was deified well beyond his merit as a general, at the expense of some of his compatriots (Longstreet) and his opponents (Grant). Lee as a Christ-like figure is an essential centerpiece for this mythology.

These essays are well constructed presentations for the dismantling of the Myth of the Lost Cause.

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very good and well supported

This is a well researched and supported account of what really happened after the Civil War. I highly recommend it.

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Defining And Analyzing the "Lost Cause" Myth.

Historian and lecturer Gary Gallagher edits and contributes to this work on the fabled "Lost Cause" myth of the Civil War.

The collection of essays defines the "Lost Cause" as the notion that the South, for all its valor and righteousness of cause (read...ahem..."States Rights"), lost only because of the North's overwhelming numbers of men and material. The war, according to the myth, wasn't started because of slavery--and slaves were depicted in the myth as happy, childlike, and content.

Gallagher, whose engaging lectures are on YouTube, has a needfully skeptical eye as an historian, and he and his colleagues do able and necessary service in defining and tearing down the myth, though the issue of the actual attitudes of slaves were left largely to the reader to figure out or read elsewhere in ample documentation showing they were anything but happy with their lot.

Any American history buff with integrity will want to include this work in their reading list.

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Group psychosis of the South. Well edited.

Wonderful story. Very saddening regarding the effort Placed in to the confabulation of the entire South regarding the reasons for the war.. And slavery. I refer to those friends of mine that live here in the South with me to read any or all of the successionist constitutions. All, repeat, all stated the reason for Succession was slavery.

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This book was very good to read with me I was just wondering what was going to happen next time I was in a good place for a few

I did it for you today so I’m sorry you didn’t reply back yet thank love

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narration marred by speaker errors

This is a collection of essays of varying quality. It is not up to the standard of Gary Gallagher's own work. I do not recommend it for the simple reason that the narrator mispronounced too many words. I didn't make a list but the last one that he bungled was the word "sepulcher." The poor quality of the narration was surprising.

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