On Fri, 26 Apr 2013 16:12:23 -0400, Hugh Lawson <
hu.l...@gmail.com>
wrote:
>Wiregrass Willie <
wiregrass_...@yahoo.com> writes:
>
>
>> My understanding is the CSA would not arm blacks
>> -- so their use as combat support would have been nil.
>>
>> And as you say -- I have no doubt some slaves did volunteer to help
>> the war effort. (You can always find somebody who will do almost
>> anything)
>>
>> My only question is -- why does anybody care ?
>
>I assume you mean, why would anybody care enough about the matter to
>argue about it? And I take it that your assumption is like mine: the
>number would have been too small to draw much of a conclusion.
That's exactly what I meant -- and that is my conclusion. I
honestly have no idea about it beyond that. I doubt many black
folks would enjoy finding their ancestor served in the CSA to help
preserve slavery. That would not be very good.
>From literary scholar E. D. Hirsch I picked up this point. People who
>study things have two different motives, the scholarly motive and the
>existential motive.
>
>Scholarly motive: the search for truth, curiosity about differing
>viewpoints that already exist, and so on. This is the kind of motive
>that people usually give.
>
>Existential motive: something about the scholar, from outside the
>scholarly world, that motivates him to take up this topic. We all have
>existential reasons for taking up a subject: to glorify and ancestor, to
>give a more favorable view of somebody we like, for a statesman or a
>commander to defend his reputation.
>
>I suspect the answer to your question lies in the domain of existential
>motives, especially in relation to feelings about 'the South'.
>
>hl
Its an odd coincidence that you posted this yesterday. Before
yesterday I had never given this subject of black CSA soldiers any
thought. But I am reading a book called "New Mind of the South" (by
Tracy Thompson). And she mentions that the subject is a
controversy and gives the below url as her source.
http://www.csmonitor.com/Books/chapter-and-verse/2010/1021/Textbook-controversy-over-claim-that-blacks-fought-for-the-Confederacy
Beyond that I still don't know anything. I suppose the Lost Cause
enthusiasts would like to think the slaves loved old Master enough to
fight and die for him. Those same folks think that the only reason
Old Master indulged in slavery was because he loved his servants so
much. He couldn't stand the thoughts of losing their love :-) Me ?
I have my doubts.
BTW, that author, Tracy Thompson, is a fellow Georgian. Raised
in Red Oak GA.