Reflection on the Civil War Periods
Introduction
The American Civil War is a major historical and turning point for the country America. While the root cause of the war was slavery, the story of the civil war, especially in the South has been significantly distorted to propagate narratives, e.g., the Lost Cause Narrative (Washington Post) that portrays the confederate fight as heroic, enslaved people as being happy, and the argument that slavery had not been the main cause of the war (Early, 67; Vox). In reflecting on the civil war, it is important to look at the events preceding and following the civil war, namely; colonization and enslavement, the civil war and its immediate consequences, and the reconstruction. This paper, therefore, seeks to explore these four periods in terms of how each is important, how it affects race within America, and its effect on the next period. Finally, the paper will conclude how a study on these four periods can inform the current socio-cultural climate within the country.
Colonization and the Enslavement of Africans and their Descendants
After the colonization of the Americas by the British, enslavement of Africans was essential for the agricultural production of the region. African slaves, brought in through the Transatlantic Slave Trade, were used to provide labor in plantations in America, and especially the south, which was heavily dependent on agriculture (Phillips, 480). From a racial viewpoint, colonization and the enslavement of Africans, not in any way seeking to belittle the suffering involved, was important in enriching the racial profile of the country America, as we know it today. However, because of the narratives that had been put in place to manage the slavery institution, e.g., white supremacy and the role of religion, colonization and enslavement set the stage for the civil war when enslaved Africans sought freedom.
Looking back to 1619, it is clearly understood how racists' ideologies helped to feed and hold the enslavement of Africans, as well as the colonization of Native Americans. It is noted that the point at which the continent America came to have the primary racial identities, the relationship was based on racial undertones, which have continued to affect the nation to date. The idea that whites are superior causes has lead to African Americans being looked down upon even to date, e.g., black neighborhoods, or even a house occupied by a black owner to attract lower value as compared to houses with white homeowners (Zonta). On the other hand, colonization caused the original owners of the land to be rendered landless, simply by a foreigner planting a flag of their home country based on "discovery" (Snyder; Tolbert, 9-10; Bassett, 23-26).
In the initial half of the 19th century, the narratives that had been used to maintain slavery, in particular, the religion narrative, had begun to backfire, and slaves began to agitate for freedom. The agitation for freedom by slaves happened in two phases; one intended to convince the south to give up on slavery and the other that sought to induce the North to use its power in Congress and through policy wipe out was considered to be a black spot on American civilization (Bassett, 428-431). This led to the North and the south taking opposing sides, and each adamant about preserving its way of life.
The Lead Up to the Civil War
The period considered to be the lead up to the Civil War was from 1815 to 1831. This period is important in the history of America because it was the beginning of the realization of a truly "land of the free" America. The beginning of the agitation for freedom is credited to Benjamin Lundy, a New Jersey Quaker, who was the leading spirit of the first movement (Bassett, 428-431). In 1816, the American Colonization Society...
Works cited
Bassett, John S. Short History of the United States. Macmillan, New York, 1913.
Best, Ryan. "Confederate Statues Were Never Really About Preserving History." FiveThirtyEight, 2020; July 8. ABC News Internet Ventures. Web.
Early, Jubal Anderson. A Memoir of the Last Year of the War for Independence, in the Confederate States of America: Containing an Account of the Operations of His Commands in the Years 1864 and 1865. No. 1. CW Button, 1867.
McPherson, James. "A Defining Time in Our Nation's History." A Brief Overview of the American Civil War. American Battlefield Trust (n.d.). Web.
Phillips, Ulrich Bonnell. American Negro slavery: A survey of the supply, employment, and control of Negro labor as determined by the plantation regime. Good Press, 1918.
Snyder, Timothy. The US government should cede territory back to Native Americans. The Guardian, 2018, April 28. Web.
Thomas, Emory M. The Confederate Nation, 1861-1865. Vol. 703. HarperCollins Publishers, 1979.
Tolbert, Payton. "This Land is Whose Land? History, Fiction, and the 1800's Cherokee Removal in Inskeep's Jacksonland." Armstrong Undergraduate Journal of History 9.2 (2019): 9.
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