Fiction
Related: About this forumConfederate and Civil War Alternate Histories
By Renee de Groot
OCTOBER 20, 2017
... Nearly 150 Civil War alternate histories (CWAHs, for convenience) have been written from 1900 to the present ...
... despite the creative freedom to change history, many CWAHs are surprisingly predictable. In concert, they even become repetitive. The genre purports to change history, but it only does so with deeply familiar images and patterns that are already part of the readers historical imagination, which it subverts, reverses, distorts, picks apart, and reassembles into something new-yet-familiar ...
... Winston Churchill (of all people) wrote a 1931 essay called If Lee Had Not Won the Battle of Gettysburg, which, as the title suggests, portrays the perspective of a historian in an alternative reality who constructs his own alternate history that corresponds to our history exactly ...
... When the narrator speculates about an alternative (to him) Reconstruction period, he mocks the effort to "graft white democratic institutions upon the simple, docile, gifted African race belonging to a much earlier chapter in human history" ... Different yet honorable, separate but equal. Churchills counterfactual speculation is among the most structurally sophisticated CWAHs, yet it has nothing thoughtful to say about the attitudes and historical interpretations prevailing in its own time ...
... If the creators of Confederate want to wade into this, I hope the controversy they aroused motivates them to pause and carefully consider what they are trying to accomplish with an alternative Civil War in our current moment. This is not idle or irrelevant question as I was writing this essay, Heather Heyer was killed in Charlottesville over a statue memorializing a failed rebel general. Whatever Confederate has to say, it better be good.
https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/divided-we-stand-confederate-and-civil-war-alternate-histories/#!

Sneederbunk
(15,874 posts)Vogon_Glory
(9,727 posts)Both were closer to what a triumphant, racist CSA would have been like. The second series was even grimmer.
hermetic
(8,781 posts)upon seeing this was that it wasn't really something we needed at this time. More fuel for the crazies, outweighing any value that might be derived from such speculation. I didn't read the article yet, though, so there's that.
Paladin
(29,692 posts)"C.S.A. Confederate States of America" was a 2004 mockumentary which was pretty well-done and positively received.