Let’s face it: a new generation of scholarship has changed the way we understand American history, particularly slavery, capitalism, and the Civil War. Our language should change as well. The old labels and terms handed down to us from the conservative scholars of the early to mid-twentieth century no longer reflect the best evidence and arguments. The tired terms served either to reassure worried Americans in a Cold War world, or uphold a white supremacist, sexist interpretation of the past. The Cold War is over, and we must reject faulty frameworks and phrases. We no longer call the Civil War “The War Between the States,” nor do we refer to women’s rights activists as “suffragettes,” nor do we call African-Americans “Negroes.” Language has changed before, and I propose that it should change again.

Legal historian Paul Finkelman (Albany Law) has made a compelling case against the label “compromise” to describe the legislative packages that avoided disunion in the antebellum era.1 In particular, Finkelman has dissected and analyzed the deals struck in 1850. Instead of the “Compromise of 1850,” which implies that both North and South gave and received equally in the bargains over slavery, the legislation should be called the “Appeasement of 1850.” Appeasement more accurately describes the uneven nature of the agreement. In 1849 and 1850, white Southerners in Congress made demands and issued threats concerning the spread and protection of slavery, and, as in 1820 and 1833, Northerners acquiesced: the slave states obtained almost everything they demanded, including an obnoxious Fugitive Slave Law, enlarged Texas border, payment of Texas debts, potential spread of slavery into new western territories, the protection of the slave trade in Washington, DC, and the renunciation of congressional authority over slavery. The free states, in turn, received almost nothing (California was permitted to enter as a free state, but residents had already voted against slavery). Hardly a compromise!

Likewise, scholar Edward Baptist (Cornell) has provided new terms with which to speak about slavery. In his 2014 book The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism (Basic Books), he rejects “plantations” (a term pregnant with false memory and romantic myths) in favor of “labor camps”; instead of “slave-owners” (which seems to legitimate and rationalize the ownership of human beings), he uses “enslavers.” Small changes with big implications. These far more accurate and appropriate terms serve his argument well, as he re-examines the role of unfree labor in the rise of the United States as an economic powerhouse and its place in the global economy. In order to tear down old myths, he eschews the old language.

I suggest we follow the lead of Finkelman and Baptist and alter our language for the Civil War. Specifically, let us drop the word “Union” when describing the United States side of the conflagration, as in “Union troops” versus “Confederate troops.” Instead of “Union,” we should say “United States.” By employing “Union” instead of “United States,” we are indirectly supporting the Confederate view of secession wherein the nation of the United States collapsed, having been built on a “sandy foundation” (according to rebel Vice President Alexander Stephens). In reality, however, the United States never ceased to exist. The Constitution continued to operate normally; elections were held; Congress, the presidency, and the courts functioned; diplomacy was conducted; taxes were collected; crimes were punished; etc. Yes, there was a massive, murderous rebellion in at least a dozen states, but that did not mean that the United States disappeared. The dichotomy of “Union v. Confederacy” is no longer acceptable language; its usage lends credibility to the Confederate experiment and undermines the legitimacy of the United States as a political entity. The United States of America fought a brutal war against a highly organized and fiercely determined rebellion – it did not stop functioning or morph into something different. We can continue to debate the nature and existence of Confederate “nationalism,” but that discussion should not affect how we label the United States during the war.

Why should we continue to employ wording that is biased, false, or laden with myth? Compromise, plantation, slave-owners, Union v. Confederacy, etc.: these phrases and many others obscure rather than illuminate; they serve the interests of traditionalists or white supremacists; they do not accurately reflect our current understanding of phenomena, thus they should be abandoned and replaced. I call upon historians in all fields to reexamine their language and terminology. Let us be careful and deliberate with our wording; though we study the past, let us not be chained to it.

(emphasis added)

  • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    Historical revisionism is a goddamn plague and should be met with a firm slap to the face any time it’s suggested, even if it’s in favor of the side we agree with.

    I don’t know what kind of fucking obsession gen Z has with labels, but you need to chill the fuck out about it. Calling the North “the United States” instead of “the Union” does absolutely fuckall to make anything better whatsoever, and it chips away at the foundations of historical accuracy.

    • Billiam@lemmy.world
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      1 hour ago

      it chips away at the foundations of historical accuracy.

      I disagree. The South was also the United States. To argue otherwise is to agree that their declarations of secession were legally valid and rather than being states in revolt needing pacification, the South was a sovereign nation which the Union engaged in a war of subjugation.

      Calling them “the Confederacy” and “the Union” continually reinforces that narrative. Irrespective of what they called themselves then (or still call themselves now) we should reframe 1861-1865 as the United States’ federal government battling state governments in open rebellion.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        19 minutes ago

        That’s stupid bullshit and you know it. The Civil War was a war between one group of guys and another group of guys. We cannot use the same term to describe both groups of guys. The historical accounts would make no sense.

        And history has ALWAYS referred to rebels and insurrectionists by the name they give themselves, it’s nothing unique to the Confederacy. Pretending it somehow “legitimizes” the Confederacy is pure bullshit dreamed up by someone who wants to puff up his “I am so very very woke” cred. It’s a solution in search of a problem.

        What do we call George Washington’s army? The same name they gave themselves, the Continental Army. What do we call Irish nationalists during the Troubles? The same name they gave themselves, the IRA. What do we call the militant Islamic fundamentalists who took over Afghanistan as the US pulled out? The same name they gave themselves, the Taliban.

        The fact that you think referring to a rebel group by the name they gave themselves has ANYTHING to do with ANY kind of narrative means you are being either disingenuous or ignorant.

        There are many, many ways to fight against bigots and racists nowadays. This is not one of them.

    • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      That said, labels do shape perception - especially among poorly educated people who just have a passing knowledge of the thing in question. Like if it were common to call the civil war “the war of northern aggression” like some people in the South historically have, that would be inaccurate as a label and would be misleading.

    • redDEAD@lemmy.ml
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      2 hours ago

      The Union was the United States, it is completely historically accurate.

      Slavers were enslavers. Words have meaning. Sorry that using the correct words hurts your feelings.

  • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    I don’t like calling plantations labor camps. While they were labor camps in part and needed forced labor on the premises to exist, they were also quite distinct from labor camps in many ways. Similarly, we don’t refer to Auschwitz as a labor camp, typically we’d say that it was a death camp - a specific type of concentration camp, which is an important facet not present in “Labor Camps” more broadly.

    Plantations also typically had large manor houses on their grounds and used slave labor not only to achieve economic goals but also to maintain the slave-owner’s house. Additionally, they often had small-scale economies and cultures where slaves were either issued tokens to trade for essentials or bartered among themselves. I see plantations as a farm-labor camp with a slave-owning family’s home present on the premises and elements of village life for enslaved workers. Plantations were typically too large to contain the slaves in locked barracks or in a walled/fenced section, so their imprisonment was enforced by a system of bounty hunters, legal enforcement for the return and punishment of runaway slaves, and other legal and cultural mechanisms that made escape difficult and dangerous rather than (typically) by physical confinement. Those are features not adequately captured by “Labor Camp”.

    • ToastedRavioli@midwest.social
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      I agree. I dont think there are many people out there that romanticize the word or concept of a plantation. Hell, Providence, RI is technically called the Providence Plantations, but no one talks about it because of the obvious negative connotations of the word.

      I agree with the other changes mentioned in the article, but I think the word plantation is already culturally derided enough that it is probably worse in the common imaginary than “labor camp”.

      Plus, plantation is just a historically accurate word. They called them plantations at the time, historical documentation refers to properties like that as plantations, so we talk about them as plantations. Plantations are pretty much solely an artifact of slavery at this point. You wouldnt say, “Im going to my uncle’s plantation this weekend” any more than you would say “Im going to my uncle’s labor camp”

  • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    You know, I can get behind these arguments.

    A lot of my vocabulary that I acquired to talk about the Civil War, be it from school and media and the like, was just conforming to the type of language everyone else used. All of the examples listed in the article, basically.

    But if there can be a concerted effort to change the way we talk about the war that further contests the many false narratives that the former Confederate states have tried to establish, count me in.

  • PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social
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    5 hours ago

    The United States kicked the shit out of those traitors.

    The only thing we did wrong was not turning over the labor camps to the enslaved and letting them kill their oppressors

    When rebels rise up, they must be defeated. And after they are defeated the must be completely eradicated or else they fester like a maggot-riddled wound

    • Jerb322@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Now they’re in power and the roles are switched.

      The maggots turned into flies and had more maggots.

    • JayDee@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 hours ago

      Personally, I doubt that most enslavers would be killed had they been turned over to their newly-liberated slaves. Why act out in aggression when you’ve just won what you would have killed for before?

      Even so, you as the enslaver have cast the dice and been shown mercy. Can’t really sell that whole ‘Black retribution’ bullshit when the moment has come and gone without occurrance. I agree, turning the land over to the enslaved and letting them decide the fate of the enslavers would’ve done the US a load of good.