A Journey through America’s past
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Confederates in the Attic: Dispatches From the Unfinished Civil War is a book that deconstructs our nation’s, and the South’s in particular, continued fascination with the Civil War. In his youth, journalist Tony Horwitz found the Civil War an intriguing subject and in this book he takes the reader on a quest to answer why the Civil War can’t be forgotten.
His journey through the South takes him to battle reenactments, where he meets “hard-core” re-enactors, men who pride themselves on their completely authentic Civil War lifestyle, from their official war clothing to crash dieting to reach the weight of Civil War soldiers. Mr. Horwitz follows these men around, participating in reenactments, eating hardtack under rain drenched tents, and grappling with the South’s refusal to lose the war.
He also explores other factors like race, community, and the myth of the Civil War. During these explorations, Mr. Horwitz interviews author Shelby Foote, who came to fame after Ken Burns featured him in his PBS Civil War mini-series. The author also interviews the oldest living Confederate widow and a woman who supposedly lives on Tara, the plantation from Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind.
This was a sometimes appalling, sometimes amazing analysis of, not just the obsession with the Civil War, but of a culture that keeps “The Lost Cause” alive. Tony Horwitz tells a balanced account of what it means to be from the South, including modern racism and apathy, and the glorification of a very brutal time in American history.
Entry Filed under: Nonfiction
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