The recent controversies surrounding the Confederate flag and Confederate monuments has sparked increased interest understanding why many people, particularly in the South, celebrate the Confederate States of America. This thesis seeks to better understand the motivations and emotions behind the persistence of the Lost Cause among students at the University of South Carolina. This study utilizes both deep textual readings and sentiment analysis to analyze student-published newspaper articles printed in The Gamecock from 1960-2006 and survey responses from current University of South Carolina students to capture the scope and history of belief in the Lost Cause at the University of South Carolina. The Lost Cause has gradually lost support fr...
This study examines Confederate nationalism in Western North Carolina during the Civil War. Using se...
The removal of the Confederate flag from the State House grounds in Columbia, South Carolina during ...
Universities across the country have been forced to confront how they remember and memorialize the p...
The recent controversies surrounding the Confederate flag and Confederate monuments has sparked incr...
Until July 2000, three Confederate battle flags flew at the South Carolina State House—one in each L...
From the 1890s to the 1940s, students at southern college campuses, like most white southerners, par...
The Lost Cause is a pseudohistorical narrative created in the Southern United States to justify the ...
A historian on a mission, Adam H. Domby seeks to expose how “white supremacy, fraud, and fabricated ...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
In recent years, several racial instances have occurred in the United States that have reinvigorated...
The deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other African Americans have capitulated a...
This thesis explores the Confederate Relic Room and its final years in the hands of the United Daugh...
In 1960 the South Carolina Confederate War Centennial Commission sponsored a reenactment of the 1860...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
The Lost Cause is an ideology that falsely portrays the antebellum South as an idyllic, agrarian soc...
This study examines Confederate nationalism in Western North Carolina during the Civil War. Using se...
The removal of the Confederate flag from the State House grounds in Columbia, South Carolina during ...
Universities across the country have been forced to confront how they remember and memorialize the p...
The recent controversies surrounding the Confederate flag and Confederate monuments has sparked incr...
Until July 2000, three Confederate battle flags flew at the South Carolina State House—one in each L...
From the 1890s to the 1940s, students at southern college campuses, like most white southerners, par...
The Lost Cause is a pseudohistorical narrative created in the Southern United States to justify the ...
A historian on a mission, Adam H. Domby seeks to expose how “white supremacy, fraud, and fabricated ...
The term Lost Cause originated in 1866 when a Virginia journalist published a book with that title w...
In recent years, several racial instances have occurred in the United States that have reinvigorated...
The deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and countless other African Americans have capitulated a...
This thesis explores the Confederate Relic Room and its final years in the hands of the United Daugh...
In 1960 the South Carolina Confederate War Centennial Commission sponsored a reenactment of the 1860...
Fascination with the Lost Cause seems to know no end—at least among historians, who keep publishing ...
The Lost Cause is an ideology that falsely portrays the antebellum South as an idyllic, agrarian soc...
This study examines Confederate nationalism in Western North Carolina during the Civil War. Using se...
The removal of the Confederate flag from the State House grounds in Columbia, South Carolina during ...
Universities across the country have been forced to confront how they remember and memorialize the p...