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  • The Politics of the Dead

    New Republic, DC
    April 4 2008


    The Politics of the Dead
    by Steven Hahn
    Post Date Wednesday, April 23, 2008



    This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War
    By Drew Gilpin Faust
    (Alfred A. Knopf, 346 pp., $27.95)


    The Civil War and the Limits of Destruction
    By Mark E. Neely Jr.
    (Harvard University Press, 277 pp., $27.95)


    I.

    Dreadful as the past century has been in its carnage, Americans
    have--with some notable exceptions--been removed from the direct
    encounters. The bloody battlefields, bombed-out cities, and teeming
    detention camps lay elsewhere--indeed, almost everywhere else. And
    although Americans have suffered their share of war-related
    casualties, on a world scale those casualties seem to pale beside the
    body counts of Europeans during their more than thirty years of
    twentieth-century warfare, of Soviets and Chinese during their
    internal and external struggles of more than half a century, of
    Armenians at the hands of the Turks, Jews at the hands of the Nazis,
    Bosnians at the hands of the Serbs, and, most recently, of different
    ethnic and religious groups of Africans at the hands of each other.

    The American government has learned, sometimes in fits and starts, to
    "manage" the problem of its troop casualties much as early
    nineteenth-century reformers learned to "manage" the punishment of
    social deviants: remove them from public view and institutionalize
    their recognition. As early as World War II, a major effort was made
    to keep photographs of dead and wounded American soldiers out of the
    media, and after televised newsreporting brought the Vietnam War
    "home" each night and helped to turn the American public against it,
    a dramatically different protocol was put in place for the first Gulf
    war and now for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. No battle footage,
    bleeding soldiers, or flag-draped coffins are to be seen.
    Remembrances are consigned instead to the dry print and official
    wordings of interior newspaper pages, and assimilated to the formal
    occasions marking collective sacrifice: Armistice Day, Memorial Day,
    the Fourth of July. It was remarkable, and telling, that well- placed
    commentators could regard the attacks of September 11 as heralding an
    end of American "innocence."

    Whatever "innocence" Americans could claim--forget, for the moment,
    the many atrocities committed against Indians and people of African
    descent since the time of European settlement--was surely lost much
    earlier, in the 1860s, in the hills, woods, villages, and cornfields
    of their own country. During those years Americans slaughtered each
    other in great numbers in what we have come to call the Civil War,
    and as a consequence they encountered dying and death on a scale
    never attained before or since. That encounter, Drew Gilpin Faust
    tells us in her moving, disturbing, suggestive, and elegant book,
    would not only shock, but also transform, Americans and their nation
    in ways that resonate to this day.

    The storm of death and destruction unleashed by the Civil War is not
    a new discovery, however much it tends to recede in our current age
    of real and potential exterminisms. There were more than a million
    casualties and more than six hundred thousand deaths (we will never
    know the precise numbers) sustained by both sides during the Civil
    War. These numbers far overshadow any other war in which Americans
    have participated and roughly approximate the human costs of all
    other American wars combined. Yet for all that has been written about
    the Civil War, about its politics, battles, strategies, and
    consequences, we know almost nothing about the problems of death that
    the war forced upon North and South alike.

    If for nothing else, Faust's book would be immensely valuable for
    taking us to this hallowed and wrenching ground; but there is much
    more as well. This Republic of Suffering--Faust takes these words
    from Frederick Law Olmsted, as he looked, aghast, over the sea of
    wounded and dying Union soldiers on the Virginia Peninsula in
    1862--asks us to consider how soldiers and civilians, families and
    friends, military commanders and state officials confronted both the
    prospects and the logistics of what was in many respects a new type
    of death, and how everyone may have been changed by it. Quietly but
    forcefully, Faust shows that Civil War death had a social, cultural,
    and political history, and one that may have played a signal role in
    creating modern American society.

    That history animates what might otherwise seem a morbidly inanimate
    subject, and Faust organizes her account around what she calls the
    "work of death." Fittingly, her chapter titles--gerunds all--remind
    us that human beings are active participants in death rather than
    passive victims of it: "Dying," "Killing," "Burying," "Naming,"
    "Realizing," "Believing and Doubting," "Accounting," "Numbering,"
    "Surviving." And in the Civil War, the "work" proved to be as
    destabilizing as it was massive.

    To be sure, Americans of the antebellum decades were no strangers to
    death's ubiquity. Urbanization had increased mortality and morbidity
    and decreased life expectancy, especially in the Northeast. But
    having been reared in Christian traditions (the great majority were,
    at this point, Protestant), they also understood death as a social
    and spiritual process, as a reckoning and a transition, and so had
    been tutored in an idea of the "Good Death." Theologically rooted in
    what was known as the ars moriendi, or "the arts of dying," which
    provided rules of conduct (how to surrender one's soul, and resist
    the devil's temptations, and identify with Christ, and pray) since at
    least the fifteenth century, the "Good Death" would later find
    expression in sermons, religious tracts, and popular literature
    (Dickens, Thackeray, Stowe). By the mid-nineteenth century, it had
    become a feature of middle-class cultural practice more broadly, in
    which witness-bearing by family members proved central. After all,
    most Americans, especially middle- and upper-class Americans, died at
    home.

    But what would it mean for husbands, sons, and other relations to die
    many miles away, without the presence of family, with no last words
    to be heard or physical countenance to be observed, and with no sure
    knowledge (as was increasingly the case) as to where, when, and under
    what circumstances death had occurred? The burdens fell first on the
    soldiers themselves, who needed to prepare as much (if not more) for
    dying as for killing. And although they turned to the cultural
    prescriptions of manhood, patriotism, and religion to steer them
    emotionally, they also had to improvise on the ground so that some
    semblance of a Good Death might be attained. Many soldiers looked for
    friends and fighting mates to assume the responsibility for writing
    to their next of kin, not simply to provide news of death and words
    of sympathy, but also to include information about the experience of
    death itself: about their awareness and acceptance, their belief in
    God and their own salvation, and their final thoughts. More than a
    few soldiers asked company companions to forward letters that they
    had already composed in anticipation of their demise.

    Improvisation also characterized the response of both the Union and
    Confederate armies to the tasks of accounting for and then burying
    their dead. Although some efforts were made early on to establish a
    set of procedures, for the sake of public health if nothing else, the
    scale of death and the uncertainties of war quickly rendered them
    moot. Neither side had regular burial details or grave registration,
    and until 1864 the Union did not even have a comprehensive ambulance
    service. When possible, companies and regiments buried their fallen
    comrades on their own and did their best to enact rituals of respect.
    But as Faust writes, "practical realities" meant either that burials
    had to be organized more hastily and impersonally or that "retreating
    armies ... had to depend on the humanity of their opponents, who
    predictably gave precedence to their own casualties." While officers
    generally received more privileged treatment, ordinary foot soldiers
    would likely be interred individually in shallow, often unmarked
    graves--that is, if their own side buried them. If left to the
    handling of the enemy, they would probably be dumped with other
    fallen soldiers into large pits. As a consequence, nearly half of the
    Union dead and far more of the Confederate could be identified only,
    as Walt Whitman would note, "by the significant word UNKNOWN." Not
    until World War I would American soldiers wear "dog tags."

    How, then, would families at home determine the fates and the
    whereabouts of loved ones in the field? How would they struggle not
    only to learn whether loved ones were alive or dead, but also to
    comprehend--to "realize," as they put it in their letters and
    diaries--the fact of death without its physical embodiment, its
    visibility? Improvisation, together with enormous energy, was
    required here as well. Sources of "official" information--reports of
    field commanders, casualty lists in newspapers--were few, and they
    were often unreliable or inadequate. "You may have heard before you
    read this that I was killed or wounded," one New York soldier,
    anticipating Mark Twain's famous quip, could write his sister after
    the Battle of the Wilderness, "but allow me to contradict the
    report."

    Hospital nurses and visitors, Whitman best known among them, tried to
    notify kin of soldiers' fates, and an entrepreneurial cohort of paid
    agents emerged in the Union and the Confederacy offering to find
    missing soldiers for a fee. But family members often had to take
    matters into their own hands, running personal advertisements
    or--like Whitman initially did in search of his brother George--
    traveling to hospitals and battlefields in desperate hope of news. By
    the middle of the war, the United States Sanitary Commission began to
    organize the work of information collection and dissemination, not to
    mention of handling the dead, for those in the North--a harbinger of
    death's bureaucratic and state- building manifestations. Yet for all
    this, as Faust poignantly observes, it was quite possible for an
    individual soldier to be "entirely lost--a circumstance many
    civilians found difficult to fathom."




    II.

    Most of the soldiers who died during the Civil War succumbed to
    disease rather than to battle wounds. Still, the body counts (killed
    and wounded) after battles and campaigns seem staggering and ever
    escalating: 3,600 at the First Bull Run, 20,000 at Shiloh, 30,000
    during the Seven Days, 23,000 at Antietam, as many as 51,000 at
    Gettysburg, almost 70,000 during the Virginia campaigns in the spring
    of 1864. Greater firepower and accuracy, chiefly through the advent
    of muzzle-loading rifles, help to explain the new lethality of
    battle; so, too, do the intimacy and ferocity of the battlefields,
    where soldiers fought and shot their way through woods, thickets, and
    scrub at relatively close range. The overwhelming majority of those
    killed or wounded (more than 90 percent, Faust tells us) were hit by
    mini-balls, some shot from the rifles of sharpshooters who gained
    reputations as cold-blooded murderers. Although many soldiers
    struggled with the necessity of killing--this was part of the "work"
    of death, too, demanding, as Orestes Brownson put it, "the harder
    courage" and posing a number of cultural problems (and there is some
    evidence of soldiers failing to discharge their weapons), "vengeance
    came to play an ever more important role, joining principles of duty
    and self-defense in legitimating violence."

    "Especially in the heat of combat," Faust writes, soldiers "could
    seem almost possessed by the urge to kill." Small wonder that
    historians have used the terms "brutal," "cruel," "merciless," and
    "ruthless" to characterize the Civil War. But was it really that bad?
    This is the question Mark E. Neely Jr. asks us to ponder in his
    interesting yet rather tendentious book. Neely believes that
    historians, almost without exception, have taken the war out of
    historical context and sensationalized its human costs, effectively
    equating battle tolls with the nature of the fighting. Without
    denying or making light of the casualties and suffering inflicted by
    civil warfare, he is nonetheless impressed by the relative restraint
    exercised on both sides: more specifically, by the reluctance of
    Union and Confederate soldiers and their commanders to engage in
    wanton destruction or commit atrocities.

    To make his case, Neely compares the character of the fighting during
    the Civil War with other military engagements of the time, while also
    taking us to episodes during the war itself when the prospects for
    ruthlessness and brutality seemed most auspicious. He begins with the
    Mexican-American War, which has been attracting much-needed scholarly
    attention these days, and shows that American soldiers, especially
    the volunteers, engaged in such widespread and heinous depredations
    that their own officers bitterly denounced them. "Our militia &
    volunteers," General Winfield Scott told the secretary of war in
    early 1847, "have committed atrocities--horrors--in Mexico,
    sufficient to make Heaven weep, & make every American of Christian
    morals blush for his country. Murder, robbery, & rape on mothers &
    daughters, in the presence of the tied up males of the family, have
    been common all along the Rio Grande."

    A decade and a half later, overlapping in part the Civil War itself,
    Mexico was rent by yet another political and military struggle, this
    one provoked by a French invasion and the installation (with the aid
    of Mexican conservatives) of the Archduke Maximilian as emperor. In
    an effort to consolidate his power and to weaken the liberal
    opposition, Maximilian issued a "Black Decree," promising execution
    to anyone forming or supporting armed bands or groups "without legal
    authority, whether or not they proclaim a political pretext." The
    decree effectively codified practices that were already in use, which
    had led to brutal and summary punishments and provoked retaliations
    in kind. As many as five thousand Mexican prisoners may have been
    shot under the emperor's order. But while few Americans had come to
    think any better of Mexico and Mexicans since the late 1840s, they
    seemed to have developed little taste for guerrilla war and regarded
    the Black Decree (if they learned of it) as an infamous measure.

    Even the bloody massacre of Cheyennes and Arapahos at the hands of
    Colorado volunteers at Sand Creek in 1864, only a "particularly
    egregious" example of what had come to be accepted in conflicts with
    Indians, brought rebukes and condemnations from both Congress and the
    press. Neely's point in all this is to suggest that by the time of
    the Civil War notions of civilized conduct in warfare had been
    embraced in official circles; that Civil War generals rarely had to
    describe their own soldiers--including volunteers--as Winfield Scott
    in Mexico had to describe his own troops; that Lincoln never took the
    opportunity to move against Confederates in the way that Maximilian
    moved against the liberal forces in Mexico (he offered them amnesty
    instead); and that some Americans "now realized ... that time-honored
    cruelties indulged in fighting 'barbarians' and 'savages' were hardly
    acceptable to humanity."

    Indeed, while all the materials, experiences, methods, languages, and
    justifications for "total war" were readily available for Yankees and
    Confederates alike, Neely insists that they were generally rejected.
    When, for example, Confederate General Sterling Price rode with his
    bedraggled troops into Missouri in 1864, he might have expected a
    taste of the medicine that the grisly fighting between Union soldiers
    and pro-Confederate guerrillas had produced there: murders,
    executions, and other atrocities that led Jefferson Davis to complain
    of the "savage ferocity" of the enemy. Instead Price's raid saw "the
    return of traditional combat situations." "Union generals fought
    Confederate generals one way and guerrillas another," Neely observes,
    arguing against the notion that the brutality of guerrilla warfare in
    Missouri set the larger direction for "total war."

    Around the same time, Union General Philip Sheridan began a campaign
    in the Shenandoah Valley in Virginia that has been likened in its
    brutality to General William Tecumseh Sherman's march to the sea
    through Georgia. Aiming to destroy the valley as a "breadbasket" for
    the Confederacy, Sheridan is supposed to have scorched it. But Neely
    finds much exaggeration and myth-making in the accounts of Sheridan's
    campaign. Sheridan, it appears, looked chiefly to eliminate the
    valley's agricultural surplus, not its basic subsistence; and he
    ordered that farm dwellings be spared unless the inhabitants were
    guerrillas, in which case all restraint was to be relaxed. The
    distinction between "civilized" warfare and "savage" warfare was
    again in play, and the dynamic of "total war" consequently contained.

    Yet what would happen if either side learned of significant
    atrocities committed against its soldiers? Would the "limits of
    destruction" then be traversed? News of the shocking treatment of
    Union prisoners at the infamous Andersonville prison camp, where
    almost 13,000 eventually perished, created just such a situation.
    Calls for retaliation reverberated across the North, and especially
    in the halls of Congress. "Now sir," an Indiana Republican thundered,
    "if this is to be a war of extermination, let not the extermination
    be all upon one side." In the end, however, the retaliatory impulse
    failed to generate action. Opposition came, as might be expected,
    from northern Democrats and conservative Republicans who were eager
    to repair the divisions of Civil War- era America. More surprisingly,
    it came also from Radical Republicans such as Charles Sumner--not to
    mention from Lincoln himself, who, according to Neely, never really
    believed in retaliation. Only the superintendent of Andersonville,
    Henry Wirz, suffered punishment; he was hanged in November, 1865.

    Retaliations and atrocities against soldiers in uniform did occur,
    but the targets were mostly African Americans who had enlisted in the
    Union Army. The Battle of Fort Pillow, in which scores of black
    soldiers who had surrendered to the Confederates were summarily
    executed, is only the most notorious of many examples. And although
    Neely does not give much attention to this, it supports his
    overarching conclusion that "racial belief" and "racial identity"
    were the most important factors in limiting the war's
    destructiveness. When white soldiers faced each other, they seemed to
    observe the rules of "civilized" war- making; when they faced the
    racial "other," whether black, Mexican, or Indian, no rules applied.




    III.

    What are we to make of Neely's claims? And how can all the historians
    who have come to regard the Civil War as "brutal," "cruel,"
    "ruthless," and "merciless" have been so mistaken? Neely is at his
    most challenging when he suggests how casualty figures can be
    misleading, especially in comparative perspective. After all, the
    620,000 who died during the Civil War (that is the widely accepted
    figure) were, theoretically, soldiers of two countries, not one. The
    Union dead totaled only 360,000; the Confederate dead only 260,000.
    In neither case did they equal the 407,000 American soldiers who died
    during World War II. What is more, the death toll during the Crimean
    War in 1853-1856 has been placed at 640,000, most of it coming during
    a two-year period, surpassing the deaths in the Union and Confederacy
    combined over a period of four years. Drew Faust might say that
    620,000 dead in America during the 1860s would be equivalent to
    5,500,000 dead in America today; and Neely might respond that Faust's
    reasoning typifies the sensationalizing disposition among historians.

    Let us grant for a moment that historians have been disposed to
    "sensationalize" Civil War casualties (though I am not sure what is
    to be gained by this, since the readership for histories of this war
    has always been robust), and that we ought to interrogate our
    assumptions about the war's destructiveness. Where does this leave
    us? The Civil War witnessed a remarkable and unprecedented
    mobilization of resources on each side. Between half and
    three-quarters of all men of military age served at some point during
    the conflict. (There was a higher proportion in the Confederacy than
    in the Union, but impressive in either case.) The federal
    government's authority and capacity expanded dramatically, and a
    Confederate state was created from scratch, with remarkable results.
    Thousands of slaves were impressed to work on Confederate
    fortifications and in Confederate war industries. Both the Union and
    the Confederacy enacted military conscription, printed currency,
    imposed taxes, and centralized power. And the Union embraced the
    unconditional surrender of the Confederacy as its war goal. The Civil
    War, in other words, assumed many of the features of "total war,"
    even if it was, in effect, a set of domestic rebellions or
    insurrections.

    What makes the Civil War--the War of the Rebellion, as it was known
    at the time, at least in the North--interesting is its political
    character and the political transformations it brought into being.
    And these Neely appears to ignore in his effort to confound the
    conventional wisdom. Neely might regard the massacre of black troops
    at Fort Pillow as a racist sidebar to the main, and relatively
    restrained, action. But in truth Fort Pillow captures far more of the
    central dynamic of the conflict. The war, let us remember, was
    provoked by a rebellion of Southern slaveholders against the
    authority of the federal government. The Lincoln administration
    regarded the rebellion as a treasonous act that it aimed to suppress
    militarily, and never officially recognized the Confederacy's
    existence (nor did any other nation). The slaveholders' rebellion and
    the Union invasion of the South in turn provoked a rebellion of
    growing numbers of slaves, who fled from their plantations and farms,
    headed to Union lines in the expectation of finding freedom, and
    signed up to fight their owners as soon as the Lincoln administration
    allowed them to do so.

    The Confederates did not take the slaves' actions lightly. They
    considered black soldiers to be slaves in rebellion and ordered that,
    if captured, they be treated as such: re-enslaved or executed by the
    authorities of the states to which they belonged. General Nathan
    Bedford Forrest, the Confederate commander at Fort Pillow (and later
    one of the organizers of the Ku Klux Klan), simply short-circuited
    the process. "It was understood among us," one Confederate soldier
    wrote in 1864 from North Carolina, "that we take no negro prisoners."
    By the end of the war, black soldiers composed about 10 percent of
    the Union Army, and in some departments close to half of it. In this,
    as in so many other areas of meaning, African Americans seemed to
    have understood better than their white counterparts the social
    transformations that the wartime struggles portended, and the need to
    debilitate if not to destroy the enemy. The intensity of their
    military engagements captured a political essence of the war, and
    foreshadowed the bloody encounters of the postwar period.

    At all events, it would appear to matter less whether the body counts
    were as uniquely high as we have thought them to be, or whether the
    fighting was quite as ruthless as we had imagined, than that
    Americans, white and black, fought to the death over the future of
    slavery and, by extension, the future of their country. The "limits
    of destruction" may in fact have been most consequential not on the
    fields of war but on the fields of peace, when the federal government
    exercised restraint and refused to punish Confederate leaders and
    their supporters as traitors deserved to be.




    Although she devotes relatively few pages to it, Faust does not
    regard the butchering of black troops as marginal to the Civil War
    fighting or as merely a product of racism. She sees enslavement--its
    experience, requirements, and political logic--at the very center.
    Black soldiers, Faust argues, approached the prospects of violence
    very differently than did most white Americans, not only because of
    their sense of the war's righteousness but also because of their
    collective suffering under slavery. As one African American at the
    time explained, "To suppose that slavery, the accursed thing, could
    be abolished peacefully and laid aside innocently, after having
    plundered cradles, separated husbands and wives, parents and
    children; and after having starved to death, worked to death, whipped
    to death, run to death ... and grieved to death ... would be the
    greatest ignorance under the sun." African Americans never imagined
    that the slavery question could be settled amicably. Most of them
    relished the opportunity to take up arms against their masters. And
    as black soldiers learned that the Confederates would give them no
    quarter, and as they suffered more and more brutality, they
    necessarily fought with even greater ferocity. "There is," one
    northern observer reported, "death to the rebel in every black mans
    [sic] eyes."

    Yet just as the black experience of Civil War fighting encapsulated
    the social direction that the war was taking, so too did the black
    experience with Civil War death. African Americans risked their lives
    on many more fronts than did white Yankees or Rebels. They took
    flight from plantations in the face of double-barreled shotguns, and
    they could be hunted down in the woods and the swamps by armed Home
    Guards. They entered Union lines and contraband camps--men, women,
    and children among them--in the many hundreds, and lived in
    conditions that bred life-threatening illnesses. Those who enlisted
    in the Union Army died in dramatic numbers, overwhelmingly of
    disease. Of the 180,000 who served at some point in the war, one in
    five would perish.

    Among the riskiest activities in which black soldiers engaged was
    retrieving and burying the Union war dead. When the war ended, they
    were heavily involved not only in the army of occupation that began
    to "reconstruct" the former Confederate South, but also in a massive
    reburial program that the federal government undertook. That program,
    Faust remarks, like Reconstruction more broadly, "represented an
    extraordinary departure" and "an indication of the very different
    sort of nation that had emerged as a result of civil war."

    Although This Republic of Suffering would seem to be focused chiefly
    on wartime death, many of its most arresting and brilliantly
    conceived interventions illuminate the ways in which the Civil War
    dead reshaped the consciousness, the practices, and the structures of
    postwar America. With great insight and subtlety, Faust demonstrates
    how mass death raised profound spiritual and intellectual questions
    for many Americans, the pursuit of which led in a number of
    directions: to serious doubts about God's benevolence and agency; to
    new ideas of the relation of heaven and earth; to crises of belief
    that pointed, in the writings of Emily Dickinson, Ambrose Bierce, and
    Herman Melville, to modernist disillusionment; and, especially among
    defeated white southerners, to religious and political energies that
    simultaneously anticipated the emergence of the Bible Belt and
    promoted the Cult of the Lost Cause.

    Most striking, perhaps, was the process of state-building that the
    work of Civil War death advanced. Well before the Confederate
    surrender, Congress and the War Department provided for the
    establishment of national cemeteries, the most famous at Gettysburg,
    where, in a departure from custom, every grave was of equal status
    regardless of military rank or social station. Thereafter, responding
    to news of the desecration of Union graves and bodies and to a
    growing demand for action, the federal government created additional
    cemeteries and, even more importantly, assumed responsibility for
    those who died in its service. After four years and more than $4
    million in expenditures, the bodies of 303,536 Union soldiers had
    been gathered and reburied in seventy-four national cemeteries--an
    extraordinary effort at the time, and one that deepened a sense of
    the new citizenship that the Fourteenth Amendment had etched into the
    Constitution.

    Of the federal burial grounds that Civil War death brought into
    being, one in particular seemed to capture especially well the great
    transformations of the era. It covered not a battleground but rather
    the estate of the family of Robert E. Lee, the southern slaveholder
    and federal officer turned Confederate general, who had been driven
    out shortly after hostilities had commenced. For a time the estate
    served as Union Army headquarters, then as a contraband camp and a
    freedmen's village. Finally it became a national cemetery,
    consecrating a newly sovereign nation-state on a landscape where
    slaveholding sovereigns once claimed to rule, and taking the name of
    the estate itself: Arlington. But there as elsewhere, black soldiers
    were laid to rest in a separate and segregated section, testimony
    both to their role in remaking America and to the distance the
    country had yet to travel to fulfill its ideals.

    Steven Hahn is the author of A Nation Under Our Feet (Harvard
    University Press). His new book, The Political Worlds of Slavery and
    Freedom, will be published next year.

    http://www.tnr.com/story.html?id=304da9b5-ddb8-4 f71-ba18-3c6e3a41bc63
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