Bitter Fruits of Bondage:
The Demise of Slavery and the Collapse of the Confederacy,
1861-1865 |
| Armstead L. Robinson |
| With introductory essays by Joseph P. Reidy and Barbara
J. Fields |
| 352 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 3 maps, 6 tables |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2309-3 $34.95 |
| Carter
G. Woodson Institute Series |
 |
"Over 25 years in the making, this long-awaited book is
that rare creature that had an impact even before its birth. In
a 1977 dissertation and in various iterations thereafter, the
late Robinson made his case that the Confederacy was defeated
from within because support for slavery eroded as slaves acted
against the institution and non-slaveholding whites came toquestion
it. . . .[O]ffers a powerful counterweight to those who would
separate social dynamics from military history."
Library Journal
Bitter Fruits of Bondage is the late Armstead L. Robinson's
magnum opus, a controversial history that explodes orthodoxies
on both sides of the historical debate over why the South lost
the Civil War.
Recent studies, while conceding the importance of social factors
in the unraveling of the Confederacy, still conclude that the
South was defeated as a result of its losses on the battlefield,
which in turn resulted largely from the superiority of Northern
military manpower and industrial resources. Robinson contends
that these factors were not decisive, that the process of social
change initiated during the birth of Confederate nationalism undermined
the social and cultural foundations of the southern way of life
built on slavery, igniting class conflict that ultimately sapped
white southerners of the will to go on.
In particular, simmering tensions between nonslaveholders and
smallholding yeoman farmers on the one hand and wealthy slaveholding
planters on the other undermined Confederate solidarity on both
the homefront and the battlefield. Through their desire to be
free, slaves fanned the flames of discord. Confederate leaders
were unable to reconcile political ideology with military realities,
and, as a result, they lost control over the important Mississippi
River Valley during the first two years of the war. The major
Confederate defeats in 1863 at Vicksburg and Missionary Ridge
were directly attributable to growing disenchantment based on
class conflict over slavery.
Because the antebellum way of life proved unable to adapt successfully
to the rigors of war, the South had to fight its struggle for
nationhood against mounting odds. By synthesizing the results
of unparalleled archival research, Robinson tells the story of
how the war and slavery were intertwined, and how internal social
conflict undermined the Confederacy in the end.
Armstead L. Robinson, who died in 1995, was
the founding director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for Afro-American
and African Studies at the University of Virginia. Joseph
P. Reidy is Professor of History at Howard University.
Barbara J. Fields is Professor of History at Columbia
University.