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First Things
Books In Review
The Southern Front
Copyright (c) 1996 First Things 63 (May 1996): 49-71.
The Remaking of a Marxist
The Southern Front: History and Politics in the Culture
War. By Eugene D. Genovese. University of Missouri Press.
320 pp. $29.95.
Reviewed by Nancy R. Pearcey
The South has conquered Washington, Michael Lind fumed last summer
in a New Republic article titled "The Southern Coup." Whether
Lind is correct or merely paranoid, there's no denying that southern
political philosophy is gaining persuasive power, thanks in no small
part to the work of historian Eugene Genovese. This Brooklyn-born Yankee
of Sicilian origins-a Marxist who supported the Soviet Union "until
there was nothing left to support"-surprised himself by becoming an
admirer of southern culture. In The Southern Front, a
collection of essays and reviews, Genovese reveals how his study of the
Old South, especially its religion, challenged and changed his own
Marxist convictions.
Genovese took up southern history reluctantly, after a professor
challenged him to test his Marxism by taking the slaveholders as a
laboratory case in "how a ruling class really rules." His initial
forays, Genovese writes, were marked by "the biases of an atheist and a
historical materialist"-to whit, that religion was "no more than a
corrosive ideology at the service of ruling classes." If at the
beginning, Genovese says ruefully, "someone had told me that religion
would emerge as a positive force in my book-indeed, as the centerpiece-I
would have laughed and referred him to a psychiatrist. In the end, the
evidence proved overwhelming, and I had to eat my biases."
What was the evidence, and which biases was Genovese forced to choke
down? Fundamentally, he discovered that Marxism gravely underestimates
the power of religion. Among both black and white southerners, Genovese
writes, "the overpowering evidence of religious faith aroused in me a
skepticism about the reigning tendency in Academia to, as it were,
sociologize faith out of religion-to deny the reality of spirituality."
Among the slaves, Christian faith "carried an extraordinarily powerful
message of liberation in this world as well as the next." It empowered
them to create a vibrant culture under extreme adversity-a dynamic not
explainable in Marxist or any other sociological terms. As Genovese
writes, "No such theory or combination of theories could suffice to
explain the power of the folk religion, as manifested, for example, in
the spirituals." Unfortunately, he does not elaborate on the slaves'
religion, having given a masterful description in his 1972 book
Roll, Jordan, Roll. There he argued that Christianity saved the
slaves from dehumanization by instilling a sense of spiritual freedom
and equality.
The religion of white southerners does, however, receive considerable
attention here. Historians typically assume that the slaveholders used
religion cynically as a method of social control. But Genovese breaks
ranks. Evidence reveals that both slaveholders and freeholders
"genuinely qualified as believers." Indeed, their common faith created a
powerful bond across the boundaries of social class, something "neither
Marxism nor any other historical or sociological theory can fully
account for." Consequently, Marxists "are compelled to reconsider their
very notion of social class"-to acknowledge "the centrality of the
Christian message" in addition to economic forces in the formation of
social relations.
Yet the very fact that many southerners were sincere Christians raises a
troubling question-one Genovese returns to repeatedly: How was it
possible for decent, intelligent, God-fearing people to participate in
"the greatest enormity of the age," the injustice of slavery? His answer
is that many southerners did recoil from the practice. In the eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, southerners typically viewed slavery as
an evil or, at best, a misfortune. Even proslavery apologists, such as
theologian James Henley Thornwell, ruthlessly criticized its evils and
demanded laws to punish cruel masters and permit slaves to read. The
"militantly proslavery" Frederick Ross considered it a temporary form of
labor, destined to die out. In short, Genovese writes, many southerners
demanded that slavery "be made to conform to biblical standards," while
preaching "a doctrine of ultimate deliverance under Christian
tutelage."
In the decades before the Civil War, however, as slavery came under
harsher attack, southerners retrenched. They began to cast slavery as a
positive alternative to the problem of labor created by the industrial
revolution. Like Marx, southern intellectuals decried the immiseration
of the proletariat. They pointed to the northern cities, infected with
crime and poverty, and predicted class war and revolution. The crux of
the problem, as they saw it, was that under industrialism the elites
took no social responsibility for the working classes. By contrast,
slavery was an organic, personal, face-to-face relation; it was an
extension of the "household" (which, in preindustrial societies,
included dependent laborers). In journals and letters southerners spoke
of "my family, white and black." Southern intellectuals thus interpreted
slavery as the material base of a superior social order in which the
privileged classes took personal responsibility for workers.
Nor did it end there. In rejecting industrialism, southerners rejected a
raft of modernist ideas following in its wake: atomistic individualism,
radical egalitarianism, theological liberalism, political
centralization, and a marketplace mentality that reduces everything to
commodities. On all counts, Genovese's sympathies lie decidedly with the
South: He praises the slaveholders' "unshakable insight that bourgeois
social relations irresistibly generated a self-revolutionizing social
and economic system that dissolved family and community and made the
marketplace the arbiter of moral and social life." As an alternative,
southern intellectuals cast the plantation community as heir to the
organic communities of premodern Europe; their defense of slavery was
one strain "in a much broader defense of Christendom" against the
disintegrating tendencies of modernity.
Yet while southern intellectuals hoped to fashion a Christian social
order based on slavery, Genovese writes, Christianity also provided
resources to end slavery. Here is a remarkable tension often
misunderstood. In the academy today it is fashionable to charge Western
religion with complicity in a host of social evils: slavery, racism,
sexism, imperialism. But Genovese will have none of that. All
civilizations have been disfigured by various evils, he argues. What
sets the Christian West apart is that it alone raised "a profound
theoretical opposition to those enormities, challenging their moral
foundations and raising mass movements against them."
No matter how kind or decent individual slaveholders may have been, the
institution of slavery was itself inherently unjust, since it reduced
human beings to economic property to be bought and sold. (This was also
the fatal flaw in southerners' claim that slavery was organic-i.e.,
outside the marketplace.) Against slavery and other injustices,
Christianity alone "contributed a body of teaching that has made
possible a line of resistance and counterattack," providing "the moral
ground on which the exponents of freedom could stand." Specifically, the
Christian teaching that we are created in the image of God "denies the
right of any individual or state to treat human beings as objects of
social engineering rather than as discrete personalities sacred in the
sight of God." Until nonbelievers can match that performance, Genovese
comments dryly, "they would do well to temper their criticism and to
look to their own moral responsibilities."
Minding his own counsel, Genovese moves from the Old South to modern
Marxism, with poignant reflections on the moral responsibilities of the
political movement he calls his own. Bluntly stated, "We ended a
seventy-year experiment with socialism with little more to our credit
than tens of millions of corpses." These horrors did not arise from
perversions of Marxism, Genovese notes, "but from the ideology itself"-
from a "deep flaw in our very understanding of human nature" and from
"our inability to replace the moral and ethical baseline long provided
by the religion we have dismissed with indifference, not to say
contempt." Needless to say, today Genovese harbors no trace of contempt
toward Christianity. He urges his Marxist colleagues to reconsider "the
Christian idea of justice and equality before God," and to weigh it
against "our own blood-drenched romance with the utopia of a man-made
heaven here on earth."
Other contemporary issues Genovese discusses include the theology of
Martin Luther King, Jr., the credibility of black studies, and the
validity of black cultural autonomy in contrast to black separatism,
which he castigates for its nihilistic repudiation of Western
traditions: "Does anyone in his right mind advocate a separate black
path of development unillumined by the Christian tradition of spiritual
freedom?" The book also brings readers up to date on the southern
intellectual tradition, with pieces on Clyde Wilson, John Shelton Reed,
and the late M. E. Bradford, heirs of the southern agrarians. That
tradition contains much that "remains defensible," Genovese writes, and
he would agree with Russell Kirk who considered it "an important mode"
of conservative thought. While Michael Lind's fulminations about a
southern coup are wildly overstated, Genovese's more restrained imagery
presents southern political philosophy as one front in today's culture
war.
He does quarrel with southern conservatives, however, over the impact of
slavery on the tradition they revere. Apologists for the South typically
stress the independent freeholders as shapers of the region's ethos,
while tracing its origin ultimately to the older Christian civilization
of Europe. "This will not do," Genovese admonishes. Europeans spread
Christian culture throughout America, yet only the South doggedly
opposed the forces of modernity. Why? Because its premodern economy
provided a material alternative to industrialism. While other critics of
modernity, such as the Romantics, were retreating into the realm of
personal feeling, southerners rooted their opposition in a geographical
region with an alternative social system and real political power.
This is a bracing antidote to idealist interpretations of history. Yet
Genovese's own writing often veers toward the opposite error, with
overtones of economic determinism. He describes slaveholding as "the
essence" of Southern society; he writes that the "moral imperatives" of
a slave economy "demanded" a communitarian ethos-that antebellum
southerners "could not" accept autonomous individualism. In such
passages, Genovese comes close to saying that a society's material base
is determinative of its character and culture. He appears to forget his
own findings of the power of religious faith to transcend economic
relations. He appears to forget his own conclusion that Marxism failed
not for economic reasons but because of a sub-Christian view of human
nature.
In short, Genovese seems to waver between his ongoing commitment to a
chastened Marxism and his profound encounter with the power of
Christianity to generate culture-and to regenerate individuals. His
wife, Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, has apparently had a similar encounter,
for she recently entered the Catholic Church. Those of us who admire
Genovese as a scholar and historian might pray that he, too, will
eventually cross the threshold of faith. To borrow the concluding line
from one of the essays in this book: "May the Holy Spirit be with
him."
Nancy R. Pearcey is Fellow and Policy Director of the Wilberforce Forum, and
coauthor with Charles Thaxton of The Soul of Science (Crossway).
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Updated: 13 July 2002
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