288 pp., 61/8 x 91/4, 78 illus., notes, index
$28.00 cloth
ISBN 978-0-8078-3206-6
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ISBN 978-0-8078-6612-2
Published: April 2008
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Causes Won, Lost, and
Forgotten How Hollywood and Popular Art Shape What We Know about
the Civil War
Gary W. Gallagher
Copyright
(c) 2007 by the University of North Carolina Press. All rights
reserved.
Gary W. Gallagher, authors of Causes Won, Lost, and Forgotten:
How Hollywood and Popular Art Shape What We Know about the Civil War, on versions of history we learn at the movies.
Q: Your book looks at the way that popular
understandings of the Civil War have been shaped by four
nineteenth-century traditions. Very briefly, what are they?
A: The Civil War generation
created four major traditions that dealt with the background of the
conflict, its conduct, and its meaning. Ex-Confederates established the
Lost Cause tradition, which cast their effort to establish a
slaveholding republic as an admirable struggle against hopeless odds,
denied the importance of slavery in bringing secession and war, and
ascribed to themselves constitutional high-mindedness and gallantry on
the battlefield. The Union Cause tradition, which predominated among
white northerners, portrayed the war as an effort to maintain a viable
republic in the face of secessionist actions that threatened both the
work of the Founders and, by extension, the future of democracy in a
world that had yet to embrace the concept of self-rule. The Emancipation
Cause tradition, preeminently the work of African Americans but also
embraced by some white northerners, interpreted the war as a struggle to
liberate four million slaves and remove a cancerous influence on
American society and politics. Finally, the Reconciliation Cause
tradition represented an attempt by some white people North and South to
extol American virtues both sides manifested during the war, exalt the
restored nation that emerged from the conflict, and mute the role of
African Americans.
Q: In your opinion as a historian, how good a
job does Hollywood do in teaching Americans about the Civil
War?
A: I think it is important to
remember that Hollywood's overriding goal is to provide entertainment
that will earn profits. Studios, producers, and directors seldom have a
didactic purpose. They focus on plots and characters that create and
sustain dramatic momentum, often purchasing the film rights to
successful novels such as Gone with the Wind, Andersonville, The Killer
Angels, and Cold Mountain. Almost no one in Hollywood would insist that
a historical drama, above all, reflect the insights of the best
historical scholarship - at least not anyone who hopes to attract and
satisfy paying customers. The complexity of scholarly investigation
translates poorly to cinematic treatments in which images and sound
often take precedence over dialogue. As a result, very few films get all
the historical details right - and most get relatively few right.
Unfortunately, filmgoers often believe what they watch is "real" history
rather than primarily entertainment.
Q: Do you have a personal favorite Civil War film?
A: I think Glory (1989) is
the best Civil War film - well acted, faithful to the big historical
questions relating to the 54th Massachusetts and black soldiers in the
war, and quite moving at many points. Gettysburg (1993), based on
Michael Shaara's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Killer Angels, has
some very good moments, as does Ride With the Devil (1999), which deals
with the guerrilla war in Missouri and Kansas. I also like Pharaoh's
Army (1995) a great deal. A small-budget production about the war in
backwoods Kentucky that very few people have seen, it deserves the
attention of anyone interested in the Civil War on film.
Q: Why have we seen a resurgence in interest
in the Civil War in the last twenty years?
A: A number of factors have
contributed to a growing interest since a relatively dormant period
between 1965 and the mid-1980s. Increasing distance from Vietnam, which
soured many people on all wars, almost certainly played a role - though
the precise effect would be impossible to quantify. The years of Ronald
Reagan's presidency also had an influence, again hard to pin down, in
changing public attitudes toward the use of military strength as a tool
of national policy. Three other factors specifically related to the war
came together in the second half of the 1980s. A series of increasingly
well-publicized 125th-anniversary commemorations of Civil War events
began in 1986, reaching a high point at Gettysburg in 1988 when 12,000
re-enactors performed for 140,000 spectators and a host of newspaper and
television reporters and camera crews. Civil War preservation also burst
into the national news in 1988 after a developer announced his intention
to build on hundreds of acres adjacent to Manassas National Battlefield
Park. Confrontations about Civil War battlefield preservation, which
often centered on land near major metropolitan areas, soon became a
permanent fixture on the American scene. Finally, James M. McPherson's
Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era received a glowing endorsement
in The New York Times Book Review on February 14, 1988, and became a
bestseller en route to winning the Pulitzer Prize for history. Momentum
from the late 1980s received an enormous boost in 1990 with the airing
of Ken Burns's documentary The Civil War. Easily the most important
factor in fueling the Civil War boom of the 1990s, Burns's series
inspired large numbers of Americans to purchase books, visit National
Park Service Civil War sites, and otherwise try to deepen their
understanding of the conflict.
Q: In addition to movies, you also consider
art depicting the Civil War. What trends are on the rise in this area?
Who are the primary collectors of Civil War prints?
A: Interest in Civil War
art - prints of paintings that focus on famous military figures and
battles - also grew beginning in the late 1980s. Collected for the most
part by people with a fairly serious interest in the conflict, these
artworks overwhelmingly portray Confederate rather than Union subjects.
Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson are enormously popular as subjects.
Gettysburg leads the way among battles by a very wide margin.
Q: How do Hollywood's depictions of the Civil
War influence popular art?
A: Events and characters prominent
in Ken Burns's series and director Ron Maxwell's cinematic adaptations
of The Killer Angels and Gods and Generals have received considerable
attention from artists since the early 1990s. Colonel Joshua Lawrence
Chamberlain's popularity provides the best example of this trend. A
subject of no importance in post-Civil War artworks, Chamberlain has
become the most-painted United States military officer - eclipsing all the
great Union heroes such as U. S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, and
Philip H. Sheridan. Chamberlain and other Union commanders at Gettysburg
account for a significant proportion of all artworks on Union topics. In
a few fascinating instances, figures in paintings resemble the actors in
Maxwell's Gettysburg as much as the historical figures they represent.
Q: What common misconceptions about the Civil
War may be attributed to films?
A: I believe the most obvious
misconception would relate to northern motivation - and especially to the
absence of any real appreciation of the importance of Union. Anyone
knowing little about the conflict would come away from recent films with
strong impressions about the North's Civil War. Almost all of the
admirable characters wage a war for emancipation. The United States Army
harbors many white soldiers capable of great brutality toward civilians
and Native Americans. These men express profoundly racist views and
often appear to be inept, cowardly, or even deranged. Apart from those
devoted to emancipation, Federals subscribe to no guiding set of
principles - certainly nothing connected to the Union. In some cases,
northern soldiers manifest a sense of comradeship with their Confederate
foes, touching on points of commonality between North and South and
seemingly trapped in a conflict not of their choosing. In sum, viewers
will find strong echoes of the Emancipation Cause and to a lesser extent
of the Reconciliation Cause. They will not form any appreciation for the
Union Cause.
Q: How do depictions of the Civil War differ
from cinematic interpretations of other conflicts?
A: I believe the Civil War
inspired very romantic, sentimental films across many decades. Elements
of films such as Gone with the Wind (1939), The Horse Soldiers (1959),
and Shenandoah (1965) included some attention to the harsh side of the
conflict but also gave viewers a sense that the Civil War was somehow
less brutal than modern wars. Although Gods and Generals and a few other
recent films contain romantic elements, Hollywood, in general, has
adopted a much harder-edged approach evident in Ride with the Devil,
Pharaoh's Army, The Gangs of New York (2002), and Cold Mountain (2003).
As noted below, I believe Vietnam had an impact on this change.
Q: How did the Vietnam War impact Hollywood's vision of the Union Army?
A: I believe Vietnam heavily
influenced Hollywood's treatment of military affairs of all eras, which
has led to depictions of United States soldiers during the Civil War
that strongly resemble those of American soldiers in Vietnam. Hollywood
serves up a post-Vietnam vision of the Union army as a cruel, racist
juggernaut that wreaks havoc and stands for nothing admirable. It looks
remarkably like United States military forces in Vietnam as imagined by
Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now (1979), Oliver Stone's Platoon
(1986), Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket (1987), Brian De Palma's
Casualties of War (1989), and other such films. These movies offer harsh
images of American soldiers in Southeast Asia. Rape of Vietnamese women,
callous brutality toward civilians, application of massively superior
firepower, and gleeful destruction of non-combatants' property create a
collective portrait of unrestrained warriors. Key scenes in films such
as Cold Mountain, Pharaoh's Army, Seraphim Falls (2007), Glory, and
other recent films portray white Union soldiers in a comparable
fashion.
Q: Have you ever served as a consultant to a
movie about the Civil War? If not, would you consider doing
so?
A: I have not - though I was asked
to read an early version of the screenplay for what became the film
Gettysburg. I would be reluctant to serve as an adviser because I
believe it would be an ultimately frustrating experience. Dramatic
concerns inevitably must trump historical accuracy, so a historian's
role in Hollywood strikes me as more window - dressing than substance.
Q: What effect, if any, did Ken Burns's
series The Civil War have on historical accuracy in movies on the
conflict?
A: I see no evidence that it had
any effect - though it did help create an audience for Maxwell's film
version of The Killer Angels. In its coverage of Gettysburg, Burns's
series featured Joshua Chamberlain, the 20th Maine, and the fight for
Little Round Top on July 2, 1863 (Shaara's novel, in which Chamberlain
is a principal character, had made a great impression on Burns). Viewers
who enjoyed Burns's treatment could savor the film's long segments
devoted to Chamberlain and his men.
Q: Is there a particular movie that you would
like to see made about the Civil War? If so, what would it
explore?
A: I don't have any particular
incident that I believe cries out for cinematic treatment. Having said
that, I hasten to add that the war abounds with enormously dramatic
events and compelling personalities. Indeed, the inherent dramatic
potential is such that I have often been surprised by Hollywood's
failure to play it straight with history. Screenplays almost always
change - but seldom improve on - the rich material the war offers.
###
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