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White Lies: Part Four: Reckoning with the Lost Cause

This historical nonfiction book aims to debunk false narratives about the Confederacy that were popularized by white Southerners after the Civil War.

Here are links to our lists for the book: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
15 words 19 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. ineptitude
    unskillfulness resulting from a lack of training
    Gone with the Wind repeats the same themes as The Birth of a Nation—the ineptitude of Blacks placed into positions of power, the dangers they pose to White women, and the need for the women’s protection by members of the Ku Klux Klan (although this time vigilante activities occur off-screen).
  2. typecast
    select for the same kind of role repeatedly
    For the rest of her career she was almost invariably typecast as a Black caregiver or maid.
  3. trappings
    ornaments; embellishments to or characteristic signs of
    The setting has all the trappings of a southern estate from before the Civil War—including Blacks who are housed in ramshackle cabins and who contentedly gather for evening sing-alongs—but no mention is made of slavery or war or Reconstruction.
  4. gauche
    lacking social poise or refinement
    Among other offenses, he charged the film producer with having “committed a peculiarly gauche offense in putting out such a story in this troubled day and age. For no matter how much one argues that it’s all childish fiction, anyhow, the master-and-slave relation is so lovingly regarded in your yarn, with the Negroes bowing and scraping and singing spirituals in the night, that one might almost imagine that you figure Abe Lincoln made a mistake. Put down that mint julep, Mr. Disney!”
  5. reductive
    characterizing something in an overly simplistic way
    “The Civil War is a deeply misleading and reductive film,” observed historian James M. Lundberg when considering the series some two decades later.
  6. benevolent
    generous in providing aid to others
    They had learned that slavery was a benevolent institution, that a fight for states’ rights had triggered secession, that the war had been fought in defense of the U.S. Constitution, that the Confederacy had failed because it had been overpowered, that Reconstruction had been a calamitous disaster, and that Whites had been justified when they’d retaken control of the state.
  7. ardor
    feelings of great warmth and intensity
    In The Making of a Southerner, published in 1947, Lumpkin recollected how her father’s generation of Confederate veterans had “lent their ardor, their warm devotions, their unremitting labor, to accomplish the goal of preserving ‘Southern principles.’”
  8. culminate
    end, especially to reach a final or climactic stage
    Their nighttime parade culminated in a rally around the base of the sculpture that Moses Ezekiel had helped dedicate in 1910 en route to being hired to create a Confederate monument for Arlington National Cemetery.
  9. melee
    a noisy riotous fight
    Meanwhile, a separate group of nonviolent counterprotesters tried to express their objections to the rally without being drawn into the melee.
  10. innocuous
    lacking intent or capacity to injure
    Confederate monuments are not innocuous symbols...
  11. pretext
    a fictitious reason that conceals the real reason
    “But in using his statue as a pretext for bigotry and violence, while wrapped in the rebel flag, they’ve demonstrated, yet again, that the Lost Cause can’t be cleansed or cloaked as benign ‘Southern heritage.’
  12. genocide
    systematic killing of a racial or cultural group
    Meanwhile, pedestrians catch their feet on Stolpersteine—stumbling stone—small pavers placed in the sidewalks that commemorate individuals who lived nearby before being caught in the Holocaust’s campaign of genocide.
  13. emulation
    effort to equal or surpass another
    “To your strength will be given the defense of the Confederate soldier’s good name, the guardianship of his history, the emulation of his virtues, the perpetuation of those principles which he loved and which you love also, and those ideals which made him glorious and which you also cherish.”
  14. circumvent
    avoid or try to avoid fulfilling, answering, or performing
    Legally, Congress would have had to approve such a move, but Pete Hegseth circumvented that process for Fort Liberty by renaming it in honor of a U.S. Army private with the same last name as the previously honored Confederate general, Braxton Bragg.
  15. weaponize
    make into or use as an instrument for fighting
    These leaders have weaponized the term to alarm their constituents about everything from what is taught in school to which books belong in public libraries.
Created on Tue Jan 27 09:10:50 EST 2026 (updated Wed Feb 04 11:36:33 EST 2026)

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