"The great stumbling-block issue for the Guardian and many other liberals was the right to self-determination. The paper believed that the south had the right to secede and to establish an independent state. It suspected that it would succeed. It thought, as Gladstone did, that this might hasten the end of slavery–and it may have been right, since no slave society, including Cuba and Brazil, survived into the 20th century. Above all, though, the paper wanted to be consistent. It had supported independence for the Slavs, the Hungarians, the Italians and the Egyptians–so why not for the Confederates, too?"
In a 2011 article, Martin Kettle reviews the positions taken in The Guardian during the U.S. Civil War.
Thursday, June 11, 2020
"Anti-Lincoln Obsession"
Labels:
1860s,
Britain,
Civil War,
cultural history,
history,
journalism,
Lincoln,
Manchester,
nineteenth century
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