mitchell_vacant_chair
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| mitchell_vacant_chair [2026/02/22 22:46] – [War as a Rite of Passage] asmith47 | mitchell_vacant_chair [2026/02/27 16:20] (current) – 199.111.65.11 | ||
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| the hardening process- witnessing and coping with death (also not having a huge reaction to it) further reaffirming a boys masculinity. the more comfortable with death, the more hardened as a man. The understanding that men aren't feminized by being hardened, they are simply inhuman. (Tea Aliu) | the hardening process- witnessing and coping with death (also not having a huge reaction to it) further reaffirming a boys masculinity. the more comfortable with death, the more hardened as a man. The understanding that men aren't feminized by being hardened, they are simply inhuman. (Tea Aliu) | ||
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| + | In the Union Army, many saw serving in the military as a coming of age event. However, while war is no doubt a transformative thing to go through, it was not necessarily a coming of age thing. These men were faced with a new definition of manhood, leading them to see it differently. Men would often look back at their experience after fighting in the war as a coming of age event in retrospect, but the young men of the time didn't always see it that way. Many of them saw the moment they were dumped into battle and saw death for the first time as when they became a man, using their trauma as a trophy of the experience that hardened them and taught them self discipline, things that were cire aspects of manhood for many people. -Caroline Cocran | ||
| ===== Masculinity in the Union Army ===== | ===== Masculinity in the Union Army ===== | ||
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| The Civil War conditioned soldiers and pushed the transition from boy to man to soldier and created connections between manhood, masculinity, | The Civil War conditioned soldiers and pushed the transition from boy to man to soldier and created connections between manhood, masculinity, | ||
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| + | Going to war was envisioned as a transformation into manhood only for Northern men. Their manly virtues were praised, while Southern soldiers were emasculated or initialized; | ||
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| + | Masculinity being changed in the Union Army was through the belief that only Northern men were able to reach manhood while Southern men were seen as childish and effeminate. Mitchell also uses specific Union soldiers as examples of how they viewed manhood and masculinity, | ||
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| ===== War and the Shift in Authority: Fathers to Sons ===== | ===== War and the Shift in Authority: Fathers to Sons ===== | ||
| - | One of the most interesting points made was that "the war shifted moral authority from fathers to sons." Mitchell discusses the way in which boyhood became manhood within a military context that allowed for soldiers to question authority through their earned manhood.They began to question what soldiers were owed as they were no longer boys.It was also interesting that this meant that these men were advocating for more governmental authority | + | One of the most interesting points made was that "the war shifted moral authority from fathers to sons." Mitchell discusses the way in which boyhood became manhood within a military context that allowed for soldiers to question authority through their earned manhood.They began to question what soldiers were owed as they were no longer boys.It was also interesting that this meant these men were advocating for greater |
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| + | Discussing the concept of authority in the Civil War North, Mitchell emphasizes a certain shift in the evaluation of the Founding Fathers during and after the Civil War. He argues that Thomas Jefferson was excluded from the canon of respected founders due to his political legacy - particularly his association with states’ rights, his status as a slaveholder, | ||
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| + | During the Civil War, the language of paternalism was often assigned to the Union. This ideology reflects ideals of masculinity on both sides of the war, as well as changed the view that one side had of the other. Union soldiers valued their masculine discipline and self control, and Confederate soldiers valued strength and virility in their model of masculinity. This then affected the view Union soldiers had of Southerners, | ||
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| + | ===== Race in the Union Army ===== | ||
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| + | The fourth chapter focused on how race functioned during the Civil War era. I thought it was interesting how the author explored this topic through the lens of Thomas Wentworth Higginson, an avid abolitionist who led a volunteer Black army regiment. The sections about self-control and autonomy resonated most with me since Higginson combined his first-hand experience of manhood with his perception of what his Black soldiers experienced to craft an interesting argument. Higginson framed masculinity as an idea that would often be falsely achieved through going to war, by immature men, while also out of reach for many soldiers. Although autonomy and self-control are hallmarks of social constructs regarding masculinity, | ||
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| + | In the context of debates regarding African American masculinity, | ||
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| + | ===== Familial Understandings of the War ===== | ||
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| + | Americans during the Civil War, as they had since the country' | ||
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| + | ==== Fathers and " | ||
| + | Colonel Thomas Higginson---a white man in charge of a troop of black soldiers---subscribed to a popular view that soldiers should be treated as children, while commanders would act as their authoritative and manly fathers. While Higginson believed that all soldiers, regardless of race, should be treated as children, he still often invoked the idea that his black soldiers were a " | ||
| + | ==== The South as a Disobedient Child ==== | ||
| + | Certain metaphorical ways of discussing the Civil War in the North positioned the North as a schoolmaster using its army as a " | ||
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| + | The Union Army both femenized and infantalized the Confederates. They painted them as hysterical, emotional, and not in control. They did this as a way to boost up their own manliness while showing the South as less honorable and manly, thus weaker. Additionally, | ||
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| + | The creation of the childlike and disobedient child motif for the South, was a way to remove the manhood of the Confederates through using terms as irrational, hot-headed, and impulsive which the North viewed as feminine. Which is a direct contradiction to the " | ||
| + | ==== Reunification as Marriage ==== | ||
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| + | A significant amount of post-war media characterized the reunification of the Union as one similar to marriage. This was generally done in the favor of the North, who was portrayed as the husband. This trope appeared in fiction, often with a Union soldier marrying a Southern woman, who was, through her feminine loyalty, converted to understand the world in the " | ||
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| + | In the wake of the Civil War, the process of Reunion was seen as a marriage of the North and South. This marriage is seen in the romance novels of the time, in which it became cliche for northern men to court the southern women from the dastardly hands of inappropriately masculine men. The anthropomorphization of the North and South often has a way of characterizing the South as female and the North as male. This likely helped in the cause of reunion in the North, as women are seen as inherently apolitical beings, and makes them overly loyal to their husbands. (Tanner Gillikin) | ||
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