This well-researched book bridges the scholarship on the cultural history of death and historians' work on African Americans' experiences during emancipation and Reconstruction. Between epidemics in refugee camps and the one-fifth of Black soldiers who perished during the Civil War, as well as the racial violence that erupted across the South during Reconstruction, many Black southerners lost their lives. Ashley Towle explores how African American communities both made sense of these deaths and invoked the memory of the dead to sustain their fight for civil rights and racial justice... In both bringing the concept of mortuary politics to bear on Black southerners' experiences in the years after the Civil War and in tracing how communities made Black deaths matter, Towle makes a significant contribution. Scholars of Reconstruction and emancipation, as well as students and history professionals working with historic cemeteries, will find much of interest here.
— Journal of Southern History
This is a fascinating study of how African Americans made meaning of death in freedom. The author deploys death as an analytical tool through which to view shifting power relations between whites and the formerly enslaved in the uncertain and inchoate state of emancipation. As death abounded during the Civil War and through Reconstruction, African Americans could have easily fixed on the destructive aspect of death and devolved into despair. Instead we see how death could be “generative” and spark hope. In the author’s hands, and building on the path breaking work of Vincent Brown and his conception of “mortuary politics,” death is reworked and re purposed for political agendas. It is a compelling argument, full of great insights and stories that need to see the light of day.
— Diane Miller Sommerville, Binghamton University
Ashley Towle’s book is a beautifully rendered and deeply researched excursion into the paradoxical danse macabre constituting African American engagement with death. It explores how “mortuary politics” shaped the actions of African Americans as they carved out their own burial places under the noses of their enslavers, as they fought to end slavery in battle, as they labored—quite literally—to intern the dead in national cemeteries, as freedwomen petitioned for their pension rights as widows of veterans, as they created syncretistic religious communities that nourished political will, and as they testified before Congress to say the names of the victims of racial terror killings during Reconstruction. Towle is a sensitive and nimble guide whose use of primary sources is exceptional and whose command of the literature on American slavery, the Civil War, and Reconstruction is spot on. This is a moving and humane book that recognizes how African Americans might deploy death as an instrument of liberation, while also acknowledging the sheer human toll and brutal inheritance of enslavement. The history drawn in this book is pentimento for the present.
— Mark S. Schantz, Birmingham-Southern College