
Donnelly applied the “Page 99 Test” to his new book, Confederate Sympathies: Same-Sex Romance, Disunion, and Reunion in the Civil War Era, and reported the following:
If you open my book to page 99, you’ll find two paragraphs there quite unlike the rest of the book. The first describes the dogs used by Confederate officers to chase escaping Union prisoners of war. The second focuses on Henry Wirz, the infamous leader of the Confederate prison at Camp Sumter (popularly known as Andersonville), whose use of such dogs and other cruelties to prisoners was described in the judge advocate’s review of the trial that ended in Wirz’s conviction and execution as “This work of death seems to have been a saturnalia of enjoyment for [Wirz], who amid these savage orgies evidenced such exultation and mingled with them such nameless blasphemy and ribald jests, as at times to exhibit him rather as a demon than a man.” What is this page 99 evidence doing in a book ostensibly on cultural narratives of same- sex romance?Visit Andrew Donnelly's website.
I think a browser opening to page 99 would get some interesting stuff—maybe enough to flip back or keep reading, to get more of the book’s main content? Depictions of same-sex romance, in the Andersonville memoirs of these Union prisoners, are but two pages away in this fourth chapter, which is largely about how these white veterans, partly through these homosocial and at times homoerotic narratives, came to be seen as the central sufferers of Confederate atrocity. Here, on page 99, I’m establishing how these memoirs consciously modeled their scenes on abolitionist narratives about slavery’s atrocity. Prisoner-of-war memoirists do not claim merely that they are being hunted by dogs in the manner that enslaved people escaped in anti-slavery narratives but that these are the very same dogs, requisitioned by the Confederate government precisely for their human-hunting capacity. Just as those early narratives pinned the blame for slavery’s worst abuses on demonic individual evildoers (such as Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Simon Legree or Harriet Jacobs’s Dr. Flint), so does the judge advocate paint Wirz’s singular sadism. I go on from there, but the point is: if enslaved women were the imagined victims of abolitionist narratives, then through the echoing literary form of the prisoners’ memoir (drawing on an argument from historian Ann Fabian), white Union soldiers have taken their place.
One thread throughout the book is about this racialized shift in sympathies. Sympathies cultivated for the figures of enslaved women within antebellum literature entailed many problematic dynamics while they mobilized Northerners toward anti-slavery politics and the Civil War. That those sympathies shifted to the bodies of white male soldiers had devastating political consequences after the war and in Civil War memory. I see it as part of the story by which slavery’s role in the Civil War was diminished in favor of the story of a brother-against- brother tragedy for white Americans.
--Marshal Zeringue