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Date: | Sun, 2 Apr 2006 20:23:02 -0400 |
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Whoa...... hey...... what is this thing reviewed in the Washington Post? I never heard of the 89-minute production. Based on the review, it and its associated commercials are heavy on flagellating the South (Us?) for slavery. But I cannot tell much more about it. The picture of Neil Armstrong on the moon with a Confederate flag instead of an American flag is an attention getter. But what gives?
I think that back in the centennial of The War, some notable author(s) perhaps even Bruce Catton himself, wrote some thought-provoking alternative histories of what might have happened if the South had won. About a decade ago, Harry Turtledove wrote THE GUNS OF THE SOUTH, which I found most interesting -- a Sci-Fi novel of South-Africans transporting men and AK-47s and personal computers (called 'QWERTYs) back into Civil War times to preserve slavery (apartheid?). The cover was arresting itself, with a picture of Gen. Robert E. Lee holding an AK-47. But Turtledove went on to examine some of the issues, and I think did a much better job than he did with his later alternative-history novels on WWII.
In any case, can anybody fill me in on this latest (apparent) South bashing?
Randy Cabell
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