![]() Surveys in the South Atlantic and Gulf South states, conducted by the Linguistic Atlas of the United States in the mid-twentieth century, found more southerners called it the War between the States, although still fewer than 25 percent. War between the States has had a wider acceptance and a much longer history the Focus Poll’s results reflected a decline in its usage. As the Southern Focus Poll showed, however, even then relatively few southerners adopted it. It emerged out of white southern resentment of federal intervention in race relations during the civil rights era, and its use grew after that, encouraged by the neo-Confederate movement. Before the 1950s, almost no southerners used War of Northern Aggression. That name came into use only in the second half of the twentieth century. Yet in a 1994 Southern Focus Poll, still the most extensive poll on attitudes toward the Civil War, when asked the war’s name only 6.5 percent of southerners answered War Between the States, and fewer than 1 percent offered War of Northern Aggression. And if not that, they think, white southerners surely call it the War between the States. But by obscuring the meaning of the war, the choice of Civil War played a role in perpetuating a division over the war’s meaning and thereby contributed to today’s debates over Confederate symbols.Ī few avid defenders of those symbols talk of the War of Northern Aggression, and at least some people assume it is the South’s name for that war. It became the common usage in the early twentieth century as part of sectional reunion and reconciliation. ![]() ![]() What do Americans call the conflict that tore their nation apart from 1861 to 1865? And what difference does it make what name they use? Today most call it the Civil War, but as I discuss in my recent article in the September issue of the journal, Americans have not always agreed on that name. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |