The Lost Cause Paradox Research Paper

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Golan Altman-Shafer Mrs. Nimmer AP United States History 2 June 7, 2024 The Lost Cause Paradox: Oppression, Empowerment, and the War Between Genders The Civil War is known as the only major exception to the rule that the victors write the history. Not only that, but the losers changed the meaning of the war into a strong regional movement that far outlasted the war itself, as was the case of the American South after the Civil War. As the dust settled and the war ended, the Union was left victorious. The once proud South became a vast landscape of humility, as the people living there needed to find a way to cope with the fact that they ended up losing. Appatomox marked the end of an era and introduced changes that the Southerners abhorred, namely …show more content…
Nationalism from WWI urged women to join the Women's Klan and to get others to join as well (Blee). Religious hysteria also plays a major factor. Many Southerners were religious and used it as their way of community, and the biblical prevalence of slavery made two institutions of the Church and slavery deeply intertwined (Wilson 220). The growth of the KKK and similar groups can be compared to the change in narratives on the Civil War over time. As the KKK grew, the narrative of the Civil War changed to start negating any wrongdoing by the Confederates (Robins 289). COUNTER ARGUMENT Topic Sentence: Men were at the epicenter of Confederate glorification, especially within the religious sphere. A major example is the opening of a Jefferson Davis monument, where hundreds of thousands of people showed up (Wilson). At this event, and others like it, dictions like 'God of Israel, God of the centuries, God of our forefathers, God of Jefferson Davis and Sidney Johnston and Robert E. Lee, and Stonewall Jackson, God of the Southern Confederacy' were used. This was done because the mostly male Southern preachers extolled the idea of slavery and then racial inequality as they saw it as an ingrained part of religiosity there. They fought hard against integration because they saw it as the destruction of the religious society that they fought so hard to make (Wilson). Religious fervor was used by both …show more content…
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