The Lost Cause Movement, ideology, and symbols? (L-C)
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What is the Lost Cause Movement, ideology, and symbols? (L-C)
The Lost Cause, commonly known as the Confederacy’s Lost Cause, is USA’s most effective deception effort. The Lost Cause movement was created during Reconstruction in response to the coming end of slavery in 1865 following the Civil War, which saw an expansion of black rights during wartime. In the late 1860s, “Ladies Memorial Associations” and men’s veterans groups formed the Lost Cause, which was initially preoccupied with defending the Confederacy against mockery and treasonous allegations that ex-Confederates regarded disgraceful (Merritt, 2022). The Lost Cause was a conscious deception, primarily by white supremacist Confederate veterans and their indoctrinated children in the aftermath of the Civil War.
The movement’s ideology is one of a valiant people fighting against a tyrannical government and the “dictatorship” of abolition, who were traitors to the Confederate States, according to the Lost Cause. In addition, symbols such as Dixie and D.S.C are representative of this ideology. The Lost Cause portrayed the South as more Christian and heroic than the North, which was depicted as brutal and prejudiced. Proponents of the Lost Cause had to maintain their arguments through negative framing of the “Good Guys” versus the “Bad Guys” (Merritt, 2022).
The role of women in society was also emphasized, as they were considered to be pure and morally superior to their counterparts in Union society. This portrayal of white superiority is a common theme throughout the Lost Cause. Civil War provided fertile ground for Confederate sympathizers to use this new ideology for their own purposes (Merritt, 2022). The symbols of the Lost Cause movement can be traced to the 1890s, even though it was not until the early 20th century that they were widely adopted. The most well-known symbols of the Confederate myth are “the national flag of the Confederacy, ‘Dixie’ and states’ rights”. These symbols began to become more prominent in Southern society towards the turn of the 20th century.
Reference
Merritt, O. (2022). Opinion: A Confederate flag at the Capitol summons America’s demons. Retrieved 4 February 2022, from https://edition.cnn.com/2021/01/07/opinions/capitol-riot-confederacy-reconstruction-birth-of-a-nation-merritt-barnes/index.html