In a frenzy to follow fad, should
area government dissociate anything reeking of the Confederacy from schools and
other public spaces?
Sparked in particular by savage murders
earlier this summer, questions
have risen anew about the appropriateness of symbols identified with the
long-gone Confederate States of America serving as names of streets, buildings,
monuments, and nicknames and/or mascots of public schools’ competitive teams. Bestowing
such attention on these items in the public space risks conveying the
impression that the less salutary aspects of the Confederacy continue to receive
endorsement even to this day.
Of course, the idea that having
some Confederate-associated label disgraces irredeemably the object is terribly
oversimplified. The controversial monument celebrating the last Confederate
national government located in Shreveport that (for now) sits proximate to the
Caddo Parish Courthouse serves as a valued historic reminder, for example. Yet,
at the same time, the historical record makes clear that, of the several
reasons why the southern states rebelled, their governments’ desire to preserve
slavery was paramount, lending evil to the treasonous enterprise, thus making
invalid any argument that to fly before any other choice the (Third)
Confederate (Battle) flag celebrates certain virtues, for the present American flag
does the same without the baggage.
However, the situation becomes
murkier to judge in the instance of public school mascots and nicknames. This
explains why conversations have ensued in Caddo about North Caddo High School
and in Ouachita Parish concerning West Monroe High School, with the scholastic
and athletic teams of each carrying the moniker “rebels.”
Recently, North Caddo has started
a process to change its nickname/mascot, having already removed a “rebel”
image from its football helmets and Vivian where it is located having removed the
symbol from its water tower. It looks to follow the path of the University of
Nevada, Las Vegas by keeping the name partially, which in the 1980s adjusted
its nickname to the “Runnin’ Rebels” and modified its mascot to a military
figure less identifiable as Confederate.
In West Monroe, following somewhat the
lead of the University of Mississippi, also the Rebels, almost two decades ago,
the Confederate
flag no longer will be permitted to be displayed on campus, although unlike
Ole Miss the district will not prohibit its appearance on clothing nor the
flag’s appearance at home athletic games. No plan seems in the offing to change
the school’s nickname nor mascot, which resembles the mascot once at Ole Miss,
which was replaced with a bear in recent years.
While the flag iconography seems
particularly evocative of the Confederacy as a concept and justifies decisions
to remove it from these public institutions, changing names or even mascots
does not seem warranted. Certainly true, Confederate armed forces were termed
the “rebels” and called as such across the continent, and mascots do represent
a vague caricature of an officer of the forces attached to a government
repressive on the basis of skin color.
But caricatures are just that,
caricatures: deliberately distorting something away from its essential nature,
and in this instance into something both genial and representing a fighting
spirit many degrees removed from enforcing slavery. And not only has the term
“rebel” been used in American history in contexts far removed from the
Confederacy – after all, the in the Revolutionary War the British called
breakaway colonists “rebels” – but also a number of other sports nicknames
attached to public educational institutions utilize figures perhaps even more
unsavory than those who supported white supremacy to the point of operating
slavery: the Vikings particularly utilized butchery of civilian populations
regardless of color, as did to more selective numbers bands of Pirates, and
nobody seems upset about them (if my family lore is correct, I should be as one
of my great-great-great-great-great-grandfathers
was taken by a press gang during the French and Indian War).
Sensitivity to symbolism goes too
far when it involves nicknames and mascots. People feeling offended by these
kinds of issues perhaps have a bit too much time on their hands and blessedly
few other worries in life.
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