When it comes to Confederate monuments, there is no common ground.
Polarizing debates over their meaning have intensified into
legislative maneuvering to preserve the statues, legal battles to
remove them, and rowdy crowds taking matters into their own hands.
These conflicts have raged for well over a century--but they've
never been as intense as they are today.
In this eye-opening narrative of the efforts to raise, preserve,
protest, and remove Confederate monuments, Karen L. Cox depicts
what these statues meant to those who erected them and how a
movement arose to force a reckoning. She lucidly shows the forces
that drove white southerners to construct beacons of white
supremacy, as well as the ways that antimonument sentiment, largely
stifled during the Jim Crow era, returned with the civil rights
movement and gathered momentum in the decades after the Voting
Rights Act of 1965. Monument defenders responded with
gerrymandering and "heritage" laws intended to block efforts to
remove these statues, but hard as they worked to preserve the Lost
Cause vision of southern history, civil rights activists, Black
elected officials, and movements of ordinary people fought harder
to take the story back. Timely, accessible, and essential, No
Common Ground is the story of the seemingly invincible stone
sentinels that are just beginning to fall from their pedestals.