WBUR.ORG
Support WBUR Receive e-Newsletter
Dick Gordon: Host of The ConnectionHome
Home
   
 1/9/2009

How Do I Listen?
Archived programs are streamed in the Real Audio Format.
Click here to download
 
Problems Listening?
Try this Direct Listen Link if the "Listen to Show" button to the right does not work
 

Hosted by: Dick Gordon Show Originally Aired: 3/12/2001
CALL 1 800-423-TALK
Race, Memory and the Civil War
No Image Available


Email to friend

They say after a trauma, a person has to find a way to deal with the painful past...and move on.

So does a nation. But what if...in moving on...the underlying problem is set aside, never dealt with, only to rear its head again and again? More than 620-thousand Americans died in the trauma of the Civil War. In the years following, the nation had two tasks: to re-unite a divided country, and to repair the injustices of slavery. Historian David Blight says reunion won, and race lost. Memory ennobled soldiers of both the Blue and Gray, but blacks were painted out of the picture.

Blight says our collective memory was engineered for the sake of harmony, but that the new national anthems were full of sour notes - and a discord still hangs over us. We are re-creating memory and sanitizing the anti-slavery underpinnings of the War Between the States.

(hosted by John McChesney)
LISTEN TO SHOW
Related Shows


Bach's "Passion".
The Connection (04/11/2000)

Defending Language
The Connection (10/17/2003)

Dan Savage
The Connection (01/02/2003)

Race and Leadership
The Connection (08/28/2003)

The Politics Of Wealth
The Connection (05/23/2002)

Shaping the Future
World of Ideas (02/17/2002)
 



David W. Blight, author, "Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory"

Dwight Pitcaithley, chief historian, National Park Service

Representative Jesse Jackson, Jr, Congressman, Second Congressional District of Illinois
wbur.org    © Copyright 2009. Trustees of Boston University and WBUR