Film Review: Steven Spielberg’s
Lincoln
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Jan 3, 2013 By Patrick Ayers and Eljeer Hawkins
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The theatrical
release of Steven Spielberg’s Lincoln is situated between important
events and anniversaries. This past September 22 marked the 150th anniversary of
the preliminary draft of the Emancipation Proclamation, November 6 saw the
re-election of the first black president, Barack Obama, to a second term and
January 1, 2013 is the 150th anniversary of the final implementation of the
Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln issued the final Emancipation Proclamation as
a war measure. It declared "all persons held as slaves" within the rebel states
"are, and henceforward shall be free.”
The Making of Lincoln
Lincoln is based in part on Doris Kearns Goodwin’s award winning biography of
Lincoln, Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Lincoln adapted for the
screen by award winning playwright Tony Kushner. Lincoln is directed by
Spielberg and stars Oscar winners Daniel Day-Lewis and Sally Field. It has
already garnered a number of Golden Globe nominations and will certainly get
Oscar nominations.
Lincoln focuses on efforts to pass the Thirteenth Amendment toward the
end of the Civil War. After winning reelection in 1864, Lincoln took the
opportunity in the final days of the outgoing “lame duck” session of Congress to
pass the amendment. Passage was not guaranteed, even though the Republicans had
a strong majority. Lincoln had to deal with opposition in his Cabinet, his
party, and also win support from some Democrats (who had been the main party of
the slave owners). The film clearly intends to highlight Lincoln's skills as a
political leader in a period of crisis. The film also attempts to humanize
Abraham Lincoln who suffered from bouts of depression not dealt with fully in
the film. Lincoln’s propensity to tell stories and parables to enforce his point
to soldiers and cabinet members is in full display.
Some of the most touching and powerful scenes are with his wife Mary Todd
Lincoln portrayed by Sally Field and the profound grief of the passing of their
son Willie at the age of 11. These also include moments of play with Lincoln’s
younger son Tad and his strained relationship with his son Robert Todd Lincoln,
who wanted to enlist into the union army despite Mary Todd’s disapproval. Robert
Todd will join the union army in the final weeks of the war.
Great leaders
Daniel Day-Lewis is absolutely mesmerizing; epitomizing his methodical
approach to acting. Lewis becomes Lincoln in body, spirit and mind. Through the
sentimental and grandiose imagery in Spielberg’s directing Lincoln almost
appears as a god-like figure. Undoubtedly, the choice by the filmmakers to make
a film about Lincoln's character in the limited context of the battle for the
Thirteenth Amendment is meant to amplify Lincoln's role in events.
At one point in the film Lincoln asks a soldier in the White House, “Are we
fitted to the times we are born into?” And the soldier answers, “I don't know
about myself - you maybe.” The problem here for those that wish to fully
appreciate Lincoln's role in history, is that the filmmaker's choice of events
don't help paint the full portrait of the “times” that Lincoln had to “fit
into”.
By almost entirely featuring debates in the halls of power in Washington, the
film is not able to explore the role of the masses in the historical process.
Without the slaves, small farmers, workers, and others who were radicalized by
events leading up to the 1861 outbreak of war – and even more so after – Lincoln
would not have had a platform from which to lead. To fully understand the
qualities of Lincoln's leadership, it is vital to place his role in the context
of the broader historical process. This could have been done in a few minutes at
the beginning of the film. But, the choice by the filmmakers of Lincoln
to provide a narrow focus, without providing a full historical context, serves
to render history as being made by great people ordained by a power greater then
themselves.
The Second American Revolution
“The struggle has broken out because the two systems can no longer live
peaceably side by side on the North American continent. It can only be ended by
the victory of one system (chattel slavery) or the other (free labor).” – Karl
Marx
The Civil War ended in a revolutionary war against the slave-owning planters,
who had dominated U.S. politics for decades before the war. By abolishing
slavery, the material basis of their economic and political power was rooted
out. This revolution was necessary because the first American Revolution – the
war for Independence from Britain – ended in a compromise between the capitalist
ruling class in the North, and the slave-owning planters in the South.
Many at that time thought slavery was a dying institution. But, with the
invention of the cotton gin, and the development of the industrial revolution,
demand for cotton lead to a rapid growth of slavery – and in a far more brutal
form than before capitalism. This strengthened the slave-owning planters and
they dominated politics in the U.S. until 1860 through their two party system –
the Democrats and the Whigs.
Due to the destructive effect of cotton plantations on the soil, planters
were constantly in search of new land. This brought them into collision with the
rapidly growing population of small farmers in the North who wanted new lands
for small “free soil” farms, not large slave plantations. In 1854, small farmers
and slave-owners fought a war in Kansas over whether the new state would be a
slave state.
With the rapid growth of capitalism in the North, which had its own political
agenda, the two systems – the chattel slave system and the free labor capitalist
system – increasingly came into conflict. The refusal of the slave-owning
planters to relinquish their power made a revolution absolutely necessary.
The industrialists were in a position to lead a historic movement against the
slave owners, but they had to mobilize the masses to do it. The Republican Party
was launched in 1854 out of a growing democratic movement against the “slave
power.” Along with the small farmers and industrialists, the new party brought
together abolitionists and workers organizations that recognized an opportunity
to build a powerful movement to crush the “slave power” and open the way for a
radical transformation of society. The Republican program had a limited goal of
stopping the spread of slave lands, but this was enough to herald a death
sentence for the slave system.
Added to this opposition in the North, the slave owners constantly lived in
fear of slave rebellions. With the growth of slavery to over 4 million human
beings working in bondage, this fear became even greater. The slave-owners were
completely dependent upon racist ideology and a state apparatus that ruthlessly
enforced its needs, including enforcing fugitive slave laws and repressing
abolitionist agitation. Anti-democratic measures against abolitionists spread
fears in the North that the “slave power” was a threat to democratic freedoms.
In 1859, John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry raised alarm bells, not just
because it raised the specter of a slave rebellion, but also because John Brown,
who had fought in Kansas against the slave owners, was celebrated by many
Radical Republicans in the North. When Lincoln was elected president in 1860,
the slave-owners had already decided that their only hope for defending their
interests was an armed uprising against the North and secession.
This was the broad historical process leading up to Lincoln's election and
the outbreak of war. On the basis of two antagonistic systems, conflict and war
were inevitable.
To his credit, Lincoln fulfilled a historical necessary role in the struggle
against the class of slave-owning planters. There was a historic need for the
abolition of slavery and revolution. Lincoln’s determination to abolish slavery
before the end of the civil war was essential for the subsequent development of
capitalism over the coming decades. This also led to the development of a
powerful working class, the only class in history capable of establishing a
society truly based on equality. For these reasons, Karl Marx and his American
allies supported Lincoln and the Union army during the war. They argued against
the idea that abolition would lead to greater competition between workers and
instead argued how the working class would be strengthened by the freeing of
black labor from bondage. “Labor in the white skin can never free itself as long
as labor in the black skin is branded,” wrote Marx in Capital.
A People’s History and Hollywood
Lincoln wasn't an abolitionist and did not set out to abolish slavery. He
also held racist views. Lincoln earlier supported colonization projects for a
segment of free ex-slaves given the option to migrate to Africa and the
Caribbean. Lincoln was contradictory and cautious. Lincoln would state on
September 18, 1858, during the first Lincoln and Stephan Douglas debate, “I
will say then that I am not, nor ever have been in favor of bringing about in
any way the social and political equality of the white and black races, that I
am not nor ever have been in favor of making voters or jurors of Negroes, nor of
qualifying them to hold office, nor to intermarry with white people . . . . I as
much as any man am in favor of the superior position assigned to the white
race."-Abraham Lincoln, First Lincoln-Douglas Debate, Ottawa, Illinois,
Sept. 18, 1858, in The
Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln vol.3, pp. 145-146,
But, Lincoln was a supporter of “free labor” which was crucial for mobilizing
the northern small farmers, tradesmen and workers, who volunteered to fight in
droves. It also drew the ire of the Democratic Party, the main political prop of
slavery, who whipped up racist opposition to the “Black Republicans,” as they
were called by the Democrats.
Lincoln was a talented orator who could connect with an audience from poor
farmers to lawyers. We get a glimpse of this at the beginning of Spielberg's
film, when Lincoln discusses with two soldiers, one black and one white. Both of
them seem inspired, reciting Lincoln's Gettysburg Address by memory.
Lincoln’s thinking and actions were pushed by the intensifying social
conflict pressure from below which was decisive in forcing him to adopt new bold
proposals. Slaves themselves put pressure on the Union leaders to abolish
slavery as a war measure, as they increasingly fled to northern lines in the
course of the war. Termed ‘contrabands of war’ fleeing slaves were seen as
striking an important blow to the economic power of the South. Abolitionist
sentiments also grew enormously after the outbreak of war, thanks to the
agitation of the abolitionists.
The Army represented some of the most radicalized sections of the northern
workers and small farmers. It resembled nothing like the U.S. Army today, which
is built through a poverty draft. The Civil War was a political war, and the
Union Army was politicized. Although there was conscription, there were also
thousands of willing volunteers, because they believed that crushing the “slave
power” was important to the struggle for a better society. Members of labor
unions, socialists and other radicals played an important role in joining and
forming militias to become part of the union army. Union soldiers overwhelmingly
voted for Lincoln in the 1864 election.
Slaves Struggle for Their Own Emancipation
In the opening scene of Lincoln, a black soldier raises issues about
the racist treatment of black soldiers. But, it is merely a token reference to
the racial tensions between the white Union leaders and the black soldiers. The
movie Glory, released in 1989 and starring Matthew Broderick and Denzel
Washington, explores much more the dynamic tension between Union leaders
fighting to preserve the Union and further their careers, and black soldiers
fighting for social liberation. The struggle by the slaves for their own social
liberation was a decisive driving force of events that propelled Lincoln to
ultimately abolish slavery.
Unfortunately, the black characters in Lincoln are used as set pieces
lacking any real development, dialogue or influence on events. It’s greatly
troubling that there’s no mention or portrayal of important African American
leaders like the abolitionist freedom fighter Frederick Douglass or the
conductor of the Underground Railroad Harriet Tubman who joined the Union
forces. Lincoln in the last year of his life sought Douglass’s thoughts on the
question of slavery, post-civil war and black enfranchisement.
In the film Mary Todd Lincoln’s confidant and seamstress Elizabeth Keckley is
portrayed by actress Gloria Reuben. Keckley, a former slave herself, headed up
the Contraband Relief Association made up of slaves who escaped the confederacy.
The Contraband Relief Association and black abolitionists impressed upon Lincoln
to give up on the colonization project, inviting contraband members to the White
House and pressuring union army officials to critically examine slavery.
The film also gives the false impression that the Thirteenth Amendment came
from Lincoln when in fact the Radical Republicans and abolitionist movement
introduced the amendment in January 1864. The Radical Republicans were years
ahead of Lincoln by advocating ending slavery with full universal equality among
the races and political, economic and social enfranchisement as the radical
reconstruction period (1868-1877) illustrates.
Radical Republicans like Thaddeus Stevens are portrayed as compromisers in
the film, because they lowered emphasis on their broader demand for equality for
blacks, thus preventing the Democrats creating a distraction from the central
goal of passing the Emancipation Proclamation. But the compromises they made
were important to the material destruction of slavery. This sort of compromise
advances the struggle of the oppressed. It has nothing in common with the
compromises made before 1860 that helped maintain slavery.
The film Lincoln allows us to re-examine the 16th president of the
United States in a critical manner. It provides a background for further
exploring the horrendous conditions African-Americans and working people faced
following the end of the subsequent period of radical reconstruction, and the
speedy rise of the U.S. as an imperial capitalist nation. The massive social
struggles around the civil war bring up important issues that are played out in
the continuing battles today to end racial, class, sexual and gender
exploitation under U.S. and global capitalism. 150 years after abolition of
slavery, the working class and poor are still the true agents of revolutionary
change on the stage of world history.
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