Come to Darien Library on Mondays for a four-part lecture series on the “The Civil War: Revolt of the Planters” and learn about the tension between those who enlisted in the agrarian agenda and those with a desire to industrialize.
Can’t make the live event? Check out the video recordings at DarienLibrary.tv.
Each lecture takes place from 3 to 4 p.m. on Mondays, beginning Oct. 22 in the Community Room at Darien Library.
— announcements from Darien Library
WEEK ONE: Oct. 22 — People Who Own the Country Ought to Govern It
We the People was based on the ability to own land, yet the threat posed to the landed interests by Northern merchants and industrialization was evident with the founding of the Nation. The stage was set for the contradictions posed by the Jeffersonian versus the Hamiltonian doctrines for political primacy.
WEEK TWO: Oct. 29 — Southern Aristocracy
Join us for week two as we discuss Slaveocracy of the American Gulag, class structure of the Antebellum South, Manifest Destiny and the unfolding decline of Southern political power. All of which leads to burgeoning Southern radicalism and the secessionist movement.
WEEK THREE: Nov. 5 — Confederacy as a Revolution
The Confederacy was a revolution from the Right; an attempt to insure the primacy of a restricted clique of land gentry and the notion of Cottonism. Like the Fascists in Italy and the Nazi Revolution in Germany, the Southern Aristocracy represents that Rightist repugnance for the ideals of the Age of Reason/Enlightenment.
WEEK FOUR: Nov. 12 — Cassandra of Change
The Boyars of Cotton are unable to staunch the tsunami of revision sweeping through the 19th century. The Goetterdaemerung of the Southern Aristocracy presaged the cataclysm to come, the mass extinction of the once inviolable houses of royalty in 1918, as the tides of modernity washed away the decay of antiquity.
About the Presenter
Mark Albertson is the historical research editor at Army Aviation magazine and is a long-time member of the United States Naval Institute. In addition, Mark teaches history at Norwalk Community College.
His courses include: World War I and Iraq: Creation of Colonialism; A History, Vietnam; A History, World War I; The Turning Points of World War II; The Great Patriotic War: The Titanic Clash Between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union; and American Empire: Grand Republic to Corporate State.
In May 2005, Mark was presented with a General Assembly Citation by both houses of the state legislature in Hartford for his effort in commemorating the centennial of battleship Connecticut.