Where Death and Glory Meet: Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and the 54th Massachusetts (Russell Duncan)

1 year ago
279

Of Robert Gould Shaw, a man who was once the embodiment of heroism, and of what heroism means, and should mean, today.

The written version of this review can be found here:

https://theworthyhouse.com/2021/06/29/where-death-and-glory-meet-colonel-robert-gould-shaw-and-the-54th-massachusetts-infantry-russell-duncan/

We strongly encourage, in these days of censorship and deplatforming, all readers to bookmark our main site:

https://www.theworthyhouse.com

and to subscribe for email notifications of new posts. The Worthy House does not solicit donations or other support, or have ads. You can subscribe for email notifications here:

https://theworthyhouse.com/subscribe-by-email

This and all Worthy House narrations are offered with accurate closed captions (not auto-generated).

"I suspect that very few people under forty know who Robert Gould Shaw was. Those older may remember the 1989 film 'Glory,' which told his story. That movie could never be made today (and will probably soon be disappeared, as has been 1964’s 'Zulu'). After all, Shaw’s is an out-and-out “white savior” story, and now that everyone has been educated that the African reality is actually Wakanda, we realize that black people don’t need, and have never needed, a man such as Shaw. Yet even though the Left has racialized all of American life and shrieks ever louder for a race war (something I failed to predict, silly me), I will only touch lightly on race in this review, and will focus on heroism, the traditional center of Shaw’s story. To race, we will return another day." . . .

Loading comments...