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Thursday, July 13, 2006
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Thursday, July 13, 2006
July 2006
Iraq War: After Operation Lightning
The bombing halt
Iraq War: Al Gore on the war
A Southern Baptist cricitizes Condi-Condi
Iran and Hizbullah
Another strange George Bush press conference
Trying to follow the Israel-Lebanon War
James Bamford on the Iran hawks
Various articles on the Middle East situation
How Lebanon's Siniora sought Britain's help in May 2006 to disarm Hizbullah
And you thought the Cheney administration was reckless in *Iraq* ...
Joschka Fischer on the Israel-Lebanon War, and SPIEGEL mimics some bad habit of the US "press corps"
Israeli attacks on the UN
Questions about the Israeli Defense Force
Israel-Lebanon War: A legend failing?
Gary Hart on Bush-league diplomacy in the Middle East
More articles on the Israel-Lebanon War
Various articles on the Israel-Lebanon War
Skepticism - in both the hard and soft sciences
Israel-Lebanon War: Five Questions
Iraq War: Grim prospects
Israel's dilemma: the air war can't destroy Hizbollah, a land war has major risks
Iraq War: An evaluation by a "stay the course" supporter
An emerging "elite" consensus on Iran and Hizbollah's recent actions?
Air power
William Lind on the Israeli-Lebanese war
A short self-promotion item
Sometimes a sweater is just a sweater
Israeli preparedness
Goals of the Israeli-Lebanese war
Idolatry
Old Right isolationism and the Israeli-Lebanese war
India, Pakistan and the 07/11 attack in Mumbai
Some background on the Israeli-Lebanese war
Middle East: Death machines are rumbling...
Stabs in the back, from Yalta to Baghdad
The problems of tolerance (6): The need for tolerance, its limits and its "repressive" form
The problems of tolerance (5): Herbert Marcuse on repressive tolerance
Israel, the US and the current crisis
Syria's strategy
Against the "toy soldier model" of the Civil War
The problems of tolerance (4): Tolerance, social analysis and radical democracy
Natalie Maines (of the Dixie Chicks)
American authoritarianism
This ain't good, either
Torture in the Bush Gulag:  Is it really ending?
Iraq War: This ain't good
The problems of tolerance (3): Barrington Moore, Jr., on science and tolerance
A prophetess among us
The problems of tolerance (2): Robert Paul Wolff on going "Beyond Tolerance"
Global warming according to Tom Brokaw - and, believe it or not, it's good!
The problems of tolerance (1): Are there problems with tolerance?
What Second World War analogies would the neocons use to justify this?
Iraq War: War crimes
Frenzy on the Right
Maverick McCain gets some flack from the right
Chuckie Watch 119: Chuckie gits worked up
Andrew Jackson blasphemed (in an otherwise good post)
John Tierney and the Confederacy
Iraq War: Victory after victory after victory...
Iran War:  Is Israel shifting its position on war with Iran?
Bush and the Plame leak
The 2006 Republican campaign:  terror, terror, terror
Bob McElvaine on why Mad Annie Coulter hates Jesus and opposes Christianity
« July 2006 Archive
Thursday, July 13, 2006
1:55:00 AM EDT
Hearing Magpie, "Dangerfield"

Against the "toy soldier model" of the Civil War


I've been trying to post this as a comment to this post:  Challenging The Toy Soldier Model of Civil War History  by Kevin Levin, Civil War Memory blog 07/12/06.  But Typepad is just refusing to take my comment for some reason.  So I'm posting it as a separate post here.

I like the "toy soldier" metaphor.  Military history is obviously valuable for a lot of reasons.  But even the most devoted student will surely have their eyes glaze over occasionally as they read about this side's left flank holding firm, while the center in the other side weakened because some officer gave a mistaken command, etc.

I haven't read Lee's Miserables.  But I have seen some of the work that Reid Mitchell and James McPherson have done on the ordinary soldiers in the Civil War.  It's actually a valuable source on soldiers' lives.  The armies on both sides were highly literate, probably the most literate armies the US has ever fielded (including today's).  Many of them were in their late 20s and 30s and were husbands and fathers.  So they had reason to write lots of letters and were literate enough to write a lot of good ones.  Plus, there was no systematic military censorship of the soldiers' mail.

The drawback of stories focusing on the individual soldiers' experiences in the war itself is that the political context of the war often is obscured by the methodology itself.  There have already been good stories written by our "embedded" journalists in the Iraq War describing the narrative details of soldiers' experiences there - like Matt Taibi's current piece in Rolling Stone.

But someone could know minute details of how IEDs work, what kind of vehicles the Army uses in which part of the country and how the guerrillas are countering US helicopters and still be completely clueless about the causes of the war and its various political implications.

To understand that requires looking at the prewar political, intelligence and strategic decisions.  And the same is true of the Civil War.  For understanding how the war came to be in the first place requires knowing about things like the Fugitive Slave Law, the Wilmot Proviso and Bleeding Kansas.

The Civil War soldiers were aware of public events, especially because the decade before the war had such intensely polarized politics.  And some of that comes through in their letters, of course.  But mostly they weren't writing the folks back home to analyze the legal and political implications of the Dred Scott decision and things like that.



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