emberton_only_murder_makes_men
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emberton_only_murder_makes_men [2025/03/11 05:22] – 173.72.205.110 | emberton_only_murder_makes_men [2025/03/13 16:02] (current) – 199.111.65.11 | ||
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The reality of Black soldiers in the Union army was less than ideal. They often did similar or the same tasks that they would have done while in bondage. White Officers at best were inattentive ot the needs of black soldiers. There were rampant amounts of abuse and mistreatment from the officer corps towards these soldiers. (Tanner Gillikin) | The reality of Black soldiers in the Union army was less than ideal. They often did similar or the same tasks that they would have done while in bondage. White Officers at best were inattentive ot the needs of black soldiers. There were rampant amounts of abuse and mistreatment from the officer corps towards these soldiers. (Tanner Gillikin) | ||
+ | Many abolitionists saw the military as a quick and direct route, for African Americans, towards political and social equality. W.E.B Dubois wrote “The slave pleaded, he was humble; he protected the women of the South, and the world ignored him. The slave killed white men; and behold, he was a man.” His quote expresses the true nature of the emancipation of Slaves. Dubois is emphasizing how the killing of Confederates, | ||
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+ | Post-Civil War, many prominent figures saw the army as a “vehicle for African American liberation. William Well Brown wrote about how important the contributions from African Americans were to the Union Army during the war. His writing was just a small part of a greater movement, one that stressed military sacrifice by blacks for political leverage. (Hank L) | ||
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+ | When southern blacks were finally freed, many of them were worried and nervous rather than overjoyed. Many freed African American men knew they were going to be forced to enlist in the Union Army, rather than going home and taking care of their family. Most men were worried about having to leave their family because of the possibility of their family starving and not being able to perform the hard labor for their family. (Hank L) | ||
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+ | Military service fulfilled the longing of Black men to challenge the stereotype of femininity believed to be associated with Black men in slavery. Many whites, on both sides of the slavery debate, believed that slaves were passive and thus effeminate. Black men were unable to protect and defend their families under slavery, contradicting the traditional expectations for masculinity. (Ezra C) | ||
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+ | The service of black men in the Union army was viewed differently by W.E.B. Du Bois and Frederick Douglass. Du Bois struggled with the relationship that might happen between the manhood and freedom of black men and violence. Douglass, however, felt that the involvement of black men in the military was necessary for their own liberty. (Sarah M) | ||
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+ | W.E.B. Du Bois made the argument that black men were only able to become “real men” in the eyes of white Americans after they killed or died for the cause (in war and rebellion), which is an interesting assertion about the relationship between violence and manhood in the U.S. (Sophia) | ||
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+ | During reconstruction, | ||
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+ | In his autobiography, |
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