Kusaimamekirai’s Reviews > Weirding the War: Stories from the Civil War's Ragged Edges > Status Update
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 23 of 352
I had never really considered that “trophy seekers” in wars often prevent friends or relatives from being able to identify their loved ones. Sometimes a ring, a photo, or other personal item stolen off of a body is the only way to distinguish someone’s identity.
— Aug 22, 2023 08:29PM
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Kusaimamekirai’s Previous Updates
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 308 of 352
I often think that the 19th century was pretty much the worst time in America to be going through any kind of mental wellness issues. Despite all the traumas of war and what we now recognize as PTSD, doctors would commit soldiers to asylums based on things like
‘inconstancy on the part of his wife’, rather than because parts of their body had been shot off
— Aug 28, 2023 06:33AM
‘inconstancy on the part of his wife’, rather than because parts of their body had been shot off
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 322 of 352
"Ascribing violence and erratic actions to drunkenness allowed a cover of sorts for ailing veterans. Rather than admit that Southern men were
emotionally devastated by their experiences in battle, a concession that would likely have impugned their masculinity...drinking in excess remained within the boundaries of acceptable male behavior; falling to pieces in consequence of soldiering, a form of cowardice, was not."
— Aug 28, 2023 06:11AM
emotionally devastated by their experiences in battle, a concession that would likely have impugned their masculinity...drinking in excess remained within the boundaries of acceptable male behavior; falling to pieces in consequence of soldiering, a form of cowardice, was not."
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 304 of 352
“Prior to his military service, Leonor wrestled with the morality of slavery and declared he would love an independent life without any connection to the institution. Amputation shifted his internal perceptions about slavery and forced him to now remain dependent on other men for his health and welfare”.
With so many disfigured and disabled Southern soldiers after the war, I wonder how many did the same
— Aug 28, 2023 04:39AM
With so many disfigured and disabled Southern soldiers after the war, I wonder how many did the same
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 295 of 352
Didn’t realize what an interesting life the painter James Whistler lived. Born in the North and educated at West Point (he was an awful student), General in the Confederate army, exiled permanently from America after the war, arms dealer in Chile, finally world renown painter.
— Aug 28, 2023 12:39AM
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 196 of 352
“Thomas Jefferson famously reasoned in ‘Notes on the State of Virginia’ that the way blacks perspire made them ‘more tolerant of heat, and less so of cold, than the whites’.
The belief that Americans of African descent were better suited to hot climates became a staple justification for enslaving them; the idea that they could not endure the cold was simply its converse”
— Aug 25, 2023 10:05PM
The belief that Americans of African descent were better suited to hot climates became a staple justification for enslaving them; the idea that they could not endure the cold was simply its converse”
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 185 of 352
“There are fewer coroners reports for the war years than any other 4 year span…but the cases that do survive are suggestive: no more self-hangings, no more spousal abuse, no more dead babies…when men left certain sections of the South, they took Death with them and practiced it in new ways, primarily on themselves”
— Aug 25, 2023 09:28PM
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 179 of 352
“The Old South is often remembered as a violent place, but if you asked the coroner before the war, he’d tell you it was more fair to call it a self-destructive place. Looking out his window, what he mostly saw was white men drinking themselves and their dependents to death”
— Aug 25, 2023 09:14PM
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 179 of 352
“If you were a white male who died under suspicious circumstances in South Carolina between 1840 and 1870, you most likely died of a combination of alcohol and stupidity. If it was winter, you passed out and died of exposure. If it was spring or summer, you fell off your horse and broke your neck. The reality is sad enough. Sadder still is the price your dependents paid for your right to drink yourself stupid”
— Aug 25, 2023 09:10PM
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 167 of 352
“Other troops couldn’t bring themselves to eat rat, even after killing and frying it, although one officer claimed that it tasted better than chicken. Not like chicken, but better than chicken”
— Aug 25, 2023 08:41PM
Kusaimamekirai
is on page 143 of 352
“North Carolina’s white men generally had a lower degree of Confederate patriotic fervor than soldiers recruited from Deep South states with a higher percentage of slave owners…84% of South Carolinians ‘avowed patriotic convictions’, only 46% of North Carolinians did”
— Aug 25, 2023 05:02PM

