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The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem
 
 
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The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem [Paperback]

John M. Coski (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0674019830 978-0674019836 April 30, 2006

In recent years, the Confederate flag has become as much a news item as a Civil War relic. Intense public debates have erupted over Confederate flags flying atop state capitols, being incorporated into state flags, waving from dormitory windows, or adorning the T-shirts and jeans of public school children. To some, this piece of cloth is a symbol of white supremacy and enduring racial injustice; to others, it represents a rich Southern heritage and an essential link to a glorious past. Polarizing Americans, these "flag wars" reveal the profound--and still unhealed--schisms that have plagued the country since the Civil War.

The Confederate Battle Flag is the first comprehensive history of this contested symbol. Transcending conventional partisanship, John Coski reveals the flag's origins as one of many banners unfurled on the battlefields of the Civil War. He shows how it emerged as the preeminent representation of the Confederacy and was transformed into a cultural icon from Reconstruction on, becoming an aggressively racist symbol only after World War II and during the Civil Rights movement. We gain unique insight into the fine line between the flag's use as a historical emblem and as an invocation of the Confederate nation and all it stood for. Pursuing the flag's conflicting meanings, Coski suggests how this provocative artifact, which has been viewed with pride, fear, anger, nostalgia, and disgust, might ultimately provide Americans with the common ground of a shared and complex history.

(20050314)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Few emblems in American history have provoked stronger passions than the battle flag of the vanquished Confederacy. To some it symbolizes honor and independence; to others, hatred and slavery. This highly charged icon has finally found the fair and fact-based treatment it so desperately needs. John Coski probes every aspect of the flag's complex history, from Civil War to Civil Rights, from rebel icon to NASCAR kitsch. As readable as it is incisive, The Confederate Battle Flag shows how reactions to the banner have revealed fault lines in our culture from Appomattox to the present day.
--Tony Horwitz, author of Confederates in the Attic (20050502)

At last we have a dispassionate history of that passionate symbol, the Confederate battle flag. John Coski has dispelled myths held by both supporters and opponents of the public display of the flag. Blending cultural history and the history of memory in a lucid manner, he has written a definitive account of the numerous 'flag wars' in both South and North during the past century and more.
--James M. McPherson, author of Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (20050424)

This book is a sorely-needed and unique achievement--a deeply researched, scholarly treatment of the Confederate battle flag and its many meanings over time. With an engaging writing style fully accessible to general readers, with international sweep, and with great sensitivity, Coski brilliantly shows that the battle flag is the 'second American flag,' fraught with both racism and endless popular uses across borders that no one can expect to control.
--David W. Blight, author of Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American Memory (20050522)

This splendid book is more than timely--it's long overdue. Coski shows how a flag originally designed to avoid confusion has become a sort of Rorschach blot. It still identifies partisans, but often they seem to be fighting different wars. Whatever the flag means to you (valor, bigotry, and boogie-till-you-puke are just three of the possibilities) you'll learn something here.
--John Shelton Reed, co-author of 1001 Things Everyone Should Know About the South (20050403)

Coski presents a cogent history of the Confederate flag and the controversies surrounding it in the post-Civil War era...While some see it as emblematic of racism, to others it represents historic tradition.
--Grant A. Fredericksen (Library Journal 20050811)

In his comprehensive new book, John M. Coski chronicles the rich history of the so-called second American flag...[He passes] along a plethora of surprising stories, anecdotes, economic statistics, and editorial quotations regarding the flag. As a result, Mr. Coski's book is ultimately worth reading. Mr. Coski's meticulously researched book boils down to a simple truth: The Confederate flag means different things to different people.
--Felix Gillette (New York Sun 20050723)

John Coski...has given us the first documented consideration of the dispute over the appropriate use of what he calls 'the second American flag,' and he begins by dispelling a number of historical misconceptions about its origins and identity.
--Edwin M. Yoder Jr. (Weekly Standard 20061001)

In his richly detailed book The Confederate Battle Flag, John M. Coski calls that very familiar symbol of the Old South 'America's most embattled emblem' and he is no doubt right. Is there any icon of the American past more beloved and at the same time reviled than the star-studded diagonal blue cross against a red background...Mr. Coski's book is not just about recent debates over the flag. It is about its whole history.
--Steve Goode (Washington Times 20071009)

No symbol in the past few decades has been more divisive than the Confederate battle flag. In his important new book, The Confederate Battle Flag, John M. Coski shows how it got that way. The battle flag, though not the official banner of the Confederacy, emerged over the course of the war as the sentimental favorite among Confederate soldiers and civilians alike. Coski takes the story forward from there, but his most important contribution is his recounting of the tumultuous story of the flag in the second half of the 20th century, when the civil rights movement emerged, setting loose a variety of groups that made competing claims over the meaning of the flag--and the meaning of the war...Coski's book will speak to the flag's opponents as well as its defenders, but his most inspired message is aimed at those cheerleaders who insist that the flag has one, unchanging, fundamentally benign meaning. He shows that the history of the flag is simply too complicated for anybody to reach such simplistic conclusions...The depth and breadth of his research give his book real authority, and future disputants on both sides will have to reckon with his clear, reliable conclusions.
--Joseph Crespino (Washington Post Book World )

John M. Coski's history, The Confederate Battle Flag, brings some needed rationality to a debate driven by the raw emotion of soul injury.
--Diane McWhorter (New York Times Book Review )

If you'd like to dazzle your friends at the next cookout with what you know about the much-misunderstood Confederate flag, Coski's book is for you...Go ahead. Bring up the subject of the flag and then stand back. But if you have Coski's book under your arm, you might be able to turn the debate into something more than just finger-pointing.
--Linda Wheeler (Washington Post )

Whether you love or hate the flag, after reading Coski you will love it or hate it in a different way.
--Theo Lippman Jr. (Savannah Morning News )

A book that explains its history has been long needed, and now John M. Coski has written a very good one which everyone on both sides of the controversy over the flag should read and appreciate. Coski provides a well-researched, clearly presented, and most important of all, scrupulously fair account of the history of the battle flag and the controversies surrounding it, one that avoids polemics and strives to be true to the historical record. The Confederate Battle Flag is a splendid example of how a careful scholar can contribute to an important public debate.
--Gaines M. Foster (Civil War Book Review )

This is a solid and well-researched book. Coski's work is very much in the spirit of...David Blight's Race and Reunion. It is another excellent look at the history of Confederate memory.
--Richard R. Hourigan III (Southern Historian )

John M. Coski has given us a well-researched, clearly written history of the Confederate battle flag and how it became "America's most embattled emblem."...From Mississippi to Georgia to South Carolina to Alabama and well beyond, Coski provides a meticulous account of the flag's rapid installation as an institutionalized emblem of recalcitrant racism and defiance of federal authority.
--James C. Cobb (Journal of American History )

John M. Coski has written the first full published assessment of the changing role played by the Confederate battle flag in American history. It is a thoughtful, methodical account of how the starred blue diagonal Cross of St. Andrew on a red field eventually came to be regarded as the preeminent symbol of the would-be southern nation...Coski argues convincingly that use of the emblem was relatively infrequent and uncontroversial until it was adopted in semiofficial fashion by the 1948 Dixiecrat convention in Birmingham, Alabama. Thereafter the battle flag was associated closely in the public mind with the fight against integration--a linkage responsible for the so-called flag wars of recent years, the diversity and complexity of which Coski details with admirable clarity and fair-mindedness.
--Robert Cook, (Journal of Southern History )

The St. Andrew's cross battle flag--a star-studded blue diagonal cross on a red field--continues to this day to stir fierce emotions. In this deeply researched, dispassionately argued, and ultimately wise book, John M. Coski provides a careful history of that flag, its uses, abuses, and meanings...As the nation continues to debate the meaning of the Civil War, The Confederate Battle Flag provides badly needed historical and ethical clarity about one of the most provocative symbols of that war.
--James L. Roark (Civil War History Journal )

Coski does not move from a survey of "the modern debate" (which he shows to be several debates) into a discussion of the aspects calling for contextualization and analysis. Instead, he provides a biography of the battle flag from 1861 to the present. He carefully examines the claims about its history that have been sharply contested over the last fifteen years, but his narrative is most valuable for the wider perspective it offers in tracing the path by which the Confederate battle flag became a symbol prominent enough to sustain such vigorous controversies...This story provides a fresh background to the recent "flag wars" that Coski ably recounts in his final section. As he recognizes, these contests have taken a variety of forms that might be grouped into two basic categories. The first set has concerned the rights of individuals to display the emblem in schools or on license plates or in other regulated forums. The second set has revolved around governmental rather than individual expression, particularly in state flags or on statehouse grounds or at public schools and colleges...By moving analysis of the flag debates beyond the terms chosen by its participants, Coski achieves a stimulating success in his aim to help readers understand the controversies.
--Thomas J. Brown (South Carolina Historical Magazine )

The battle flag is enigmatic, its history has been clouded by political debate, and it is often referred to, erroneously, as the "Stars and Bars." John M. Coski's analysis of the flag's history, its uses, and its various meanings, therefore, is both welcome and needed.
--Karen L. Cox (American Historical Review )

Utilizing contemporary sources through newspapers and magazine articles, as well as primary sources such as diaries, Coski has produced a fascinating work delivered with a remarkable absence of passion involving a topic that generates seemingly little else...Coski has performed a valuable service in shining a dispassionate and informing light on the topic.
--Robert Sampson (H-Net Online )

Review

Few emblems in American history have provoked stronger passions than the battle flag of the vanquished Confederacy. To some it symbolizes honor and independence; to others, hatred and slavery. This highly charged icon has finally found the fair and fact-based treatment it so desperately needs. John Coski probes every aspect of the flag's complex history, from Civil War to Civil Rights, from rebel icon to NASCAR kitsch. As readable as it is incisive, The Confederate Battle Flag shows how reactions to the banner have revealed fault lines in our culture from Appomattox to the present day. (Tony Horwitz, author of Confederates in the Attic 20050502) --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press (April 30, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674019830
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674019836
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 5.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #600,853 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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57 of 62 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's an Ambivalent Old Flag, May 17, 2005
When you think of the national flag of the Confederate States of America, you may well think of the "Stars and Bars" which is now a familiar sight on t-shirts, truck grills, and license plates, and at Klan rallies. You would be wrong twice. That flag never was the national flag of the Confederacy and never flew over the governmental buildings of Confederacy. It also never was the Stars and Bars, which was a very different looking flag that was indeed the initial (and only the initial) national flag of the Confederacy, but which came to be detested by many southerners who thought it too much like the Stars and Stripes. The familiar star-studded diagonal blue cross on a red background is properly named in the title of John M. Coski's book, _The Confederate Battle Flag: America's Most Embattled Emblem_ (Belknap Press), a full account of the flag's history and current status. The problem with symbols, as any English major will tell you, is that they can mean too many things, so that anyone deploying a symbol may intend a different meaning from everyone who sees it, while the viewers will differ among themselves. The ambiguity of this particular symbol has led to anguish and bitterness, but Coski, the Historian at the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia, has written a beautifully even-handed account that examines the foundations of the bitterness (many of them far more recent than the Civil War) and even extends hope that the symbol "... might generate genuine insights into the complex issues of race and states' rights in the American past, present, and future."

The actual Stars and Bars, the real national flag of the Confederacy, was approved by its Provisional Congress in 1861, but was too similar to the Stars and Stripes. General P. G. T. Beauregard himself at the first major battle of the Civil War, Manassas, could not figure out whether the flag of an approaching force was friend or foe. He resolved to adopt a battle flag, so that there would be a war flag and a peace flag. Individual battle units in the Confederate forces had idiosyncratic flags, but the battle flag quickly caught on, and has been the symbol of the Confederacy ever since, although it usually is spread from the actual square into the rectangular version in popular reproductions. The Confederate Constitution guaranteed that the institution of slavery would continue. It is clear that slavery is one of the things the South was fighting to preserve, but not the one thing. Their battle flag is rightly associated with the fight to preserve slavery, but as Coski points out, the flag also stood for Southerners' defense of their own view of constitutional liberties and southern customs. What may be surprising to modern readers is that the battle flag was not a popular icon until the 1940s. It really made a political debut with the 1948 Dixiecrat Party and the run for the presidency by Strom Thurmond. It is thus legitimately associated with political resistance to segregation. The Ku Klux Klan also started featuring it in the 1940s, and the Klan's advocacy of the flag has been an embarrassment to sensible southerners ever since.

The flag has become a universal symbol of protest; the Sons of Confederate Veterans got requests for it from citizens of former Eastern bloc countries, and it was present at student protests in Yugoslavia. Since it is so easily taken up as a symbol for causes in the spectrum from states' rights to racism to race hatred, the NAACP turned to the flag issue in the 1980s, and was successful in some campaigns to have its use restricted from governmental endorsement. Coski has given specific chapters on its use in state flags, public schools, and colleges. It is only proper to understand that the flag does have a checkered past, it has been used by those with vile agendas, and that it is also viewed with affection by those Southerners who say "you can't erase history." Detractors and defenders will resolve this conflict only by intelligent compromise, and fortunately, some of the history Coski has given includes shared mutual understanding both that the flag has an important place in American history and political thought and that it has stood for causes that now even most Southerners understand are reprehensible. This useful and balanced history ought to help both sides of the controversy see the issues more clearly and generously.
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76 of 87 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What's Up With That Flag, March 18, 2005
By 
L. Bryce Vanstavern (Richmond, VA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Let me begin by saying that the author is a colleague of mine and someone I admire as an historian and as a person. He has a tremendous ability to collect facts and reach objective conclusions based entirely on those facts. That being said I grew up in the south and I grew up seeing the Confederate Battle Flag pretty much everywhere. It meant, to me as a child, exactly . . . nothing. It was a "cool" symbol of the south that meant you were a mischievous hell raiser at worst. My brother and I had Confederate Flags on beach towels, baseball caps, glasses and all sorts of things. Now, this was in the 1960's and the battle flag was a pretty popular piece to put on such things. Over the years the Confederate Battle Flag has not meant much more until recently.

In the 1980's and 1990's the flag has become the subject of controversy. Should it be flown over the state houses of some southern states? Should it be the emblem of political organizations? Should any government sponsored display feature it in any way, even if the context is historical? Where did the flag come from, what was it's place in the Confederacy and what should it's place be in our modern society? These are some of the questions addressed in Dr. Coski's book.

It may surprise many readers that the flag we think of as the Confederate Flag was never a political flag of the Confederacy. But over time the battle flag has come to be accepted somehow as "the" flag of the Confederacy. How this happened is a significant part of the book. The flag's inevitable association with the opposition to desegration is also discussed. I even learned exactly why the flag was on that beach towel my brother and I had when we were kids and what do you know, the flag really was cool!

I think the main thing this book will cause you to do is think about ideally vs. really. Ideally the battle flag should simply be an historic symbol. A symbol of the most traumatic period in American history, a period when we tried to tear ourselves apart, a tragic period whatever you may think the causes were. Ideally the flag should be something used by Confederate Veteran organizations to honor the sacrifice of their ancestors. Ideally this is what the flag should be, but REALLY is something else. In reality, the flag has also become a symbol of racism and segregationist causes. In reality the flag continues to be used as a symbol of anti-american feelings. In reality the flag has unfortunately become many things it should not be and this is where the book challenges us the most.

What is the Confederate Battle Flag to you? This is the question each person must answer. If it is a symbol of history and honored ancestors let us work hard to keep it in that perspective. If it is a symbol of racism please understand that it is NOT that to everyone. And to many it will never be anything more than it was to me when I was a child and knew little about the flag's history and uses. To those folks, it will continue to go on bumper stickers and t-shirts. Perhaps the book's greatest asset (and knowing what I know about my friend and colleague I think this is a good bet) is its challenge to all of us to THINK; think about who we are as Americans and what place this "Embattled Emblem" has in our nations, in our history and in our hearts.
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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This book's objectivity confounds its emotional critics, August 17, 2005
The author wrote this book in order to provide a factual and objective basis for a constructive dialogue about the Confederate flag. All of the many reviews in newspapers and history magazines praise the book for transcending the often unproductive debates over the meaning of the Confederate flag - debates that pit emotional reactions against each other and confuse an individual's feelings about the flag for its overall meaning. According to the book's preface, its "guiding question" is "What does the [reader] need to know in order to understand the modern debate over the battle flag?"

It is, therefore, disheartening to see that so many people are incapable of engaging this subject with anything but their emotions and their preconceived notions. Three of the so-called "reviews" posted here merely state the reviewers' own opinions and feelings about the flag and give the book gratuitously low ratings (I give it a slightly inflated full 5 stars to balance those unfair ratings.) It is obvious that the reviewers have not bothered to read the book: they make statements about the flag that the book irrefutably contradicts and make judgments about the book that are inaccurate. In an easily overlooked passage on page 291 (especially easily overlooked if one does not actually read the book), the author observes how some people tend to confuse "history" with "heritage": "The discipline of history strives to present the past objectively, but acknowledges that historical interpretation is inevitably subjective and must evolve as new evidence and new perspectives emerge. Heritage is more akin to religion than history. It is a presentation of the past based not on critical evaluation of evidence but on faith and the acceptance of dogma. Heritage seeks to define and propagate _Truth_ and often does so with the selective use of evidence. Heritage affirms the historical myths essential for national, cultural, or subcultural identity."

The Confederate heritage critics who have sought to disparage this book seem to substantiate just what the author says. Is it because they can muster no rational responses to the evidence that he presents and the objective arguments he makes? That is the conclusion that any fair-minded reader must make. It's sad, but it also underscores how truly insightful this book is.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
flag fad, embattled banner, ate battle flag, third national flag, cross battle flag, flag defenders, naval jack, flag supporters, flag opponents, historical flags, second national flag, heritage activists, erate flag, new state flag, first national flag, flag bill, existing flag, captured battle flags, racist symbol, flag change, flag use, conquered banner, ate flags, flag wars, school symbol
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
South Carolina, United States, Ole Miss, World War, Kappa Alpha, North Carolina, New York, African Americans, Army of Northern Virginia, New Orleans, Sons of Confederate Veterans, Supreme Court, Jefferson Davis, United Daughters of the Confederacy, Army of Tennessee, University of Mississippi, National Guard, Confederate Memorial Day, Little Rock, Rights Party, United Confederate Veterans, Virginia Infantry, Charles Lunsford, Deep South, General Assembly
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