A POWERFUL NEW BOOK THAT CORRECTS A FALSE MYTH IN AFRICAN AMERICAN
HISTORY THAT _KIRKUS REVIEWS_ CALLS "A THOUGHTFUL ANTIDOTE TO WHITE
SOUTHERN PROPAGANDA.”
According to an oft repeated legend, during Christmas before the Civil
War, all enslaved people in the American South enjoyed lengthy
vacations of a week or more depending on how long an oversized “Yule
log” burned in their master's fireplace. As long as the log held
out, slaves escaped heavy labor and their masters' whips and enjoyed a
rare freedom of movement to go and do what they wished as well as
gorge themselves on food and drink they never got the rest of the
year. No wonder they soaked those logs in swamps to make them burn
even longer.
But is it true?
In this book, historian Robert May takes readers on a detective caper
as he investigates a story that reaches back to colonial America and
continues today. May finds no evidence of the Yule log tradition in
the historical record, instead showing that it originated with
pro-Confederate Lost Cause propagandists attempting to present the
South's prewar system of human bondage in as soft tones as possible.
Tales about good-natured masters and unresentful slaves jovially
sharing Christmases played to this impulse beautifully.
_Debunking the Yule Log Myth_ does more than correct the historical
record. It serves as a highly instructive case study in the process of
historical mythmaking. This captivating tale will appeal to all
readers interested in African American history and the long struggle
to support white supremacy by creating a mythical antebellum American
South.
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The Disturbing History of a Plantation Legend
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9798881801793
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter