Historically Thinking
Historically Thinking
Civil War Politics
0:00
-1:02:52

Civil War Politics

Paul Escott on political traditions, personalities, and the limits of pragmatism

Originally published on July 10, 2023 (Episode 324)

Introduction

Historians love to carve time into neat boxes: the long 18th century, the short 19th, antebellum, Civil War, Reconstruction. But what if those divisions obscure more than they reveal?

Paul Escott’s new book The Civil War Political Tradition: Ten Portraits of Those That Formed It (Virginia, 2023) rejects such divisions. Instead, it explores how figures across these years embodied or resisted a political culture that emphasized individual ambition, short-term thinking, compromise, and pragmatic deal-making. This tradition could manage day-to-day or year-to-year disputes, but proved unable to resolve the deeper crisis over slavery and race.

In this episode, Escott profiles ten Americans—very different in their politics, but all bound to or pitted against that shared political culture. The result is a broader view of the American 19th century and a reminder of the limits of pragmatism when confronting moral crises.


About the Guest

Paul D. Escott is Reynolds Professor of History Emeritus at Wake Forest University. He is the author of numerous works on the Civil War era, including Slavery Remembered, The Worst Passions of Human Nature, and most recently Black Suffrage: Lincoln’s Last Goal. This is his second appearance on Historically Thinking.


For Further Investigation


💬 Listen & Discuss

  • What does Escott mean by the “Civil War political tradition”? How does this tradition help explain both compromise and failure? Share this podcast with a friend interested in politics, or the American Civil War.

    Share


➡️ Follow Historically Thinking for more conversations that challenge conventional boundaries and deepen our understanding of politics, ideas, and culture across time.

Discussion about this episode

User's avatar