Black Oedipus
The United States, at its birth, was constructed to mimic the classic values of Greece and Rome, as understood by the founding fathers. As the years continued to march on towards the Civil War, this focus on borrowing classic roots continued to hold strong: the capitol building was built in a Roman style, a statue of the first president, George Washington, was cast to look like Zeus, and cities and streets were named after Athens, Rome, and Troy. This desire to be seen as a classical Republic held through the Civil War, during which the battlefield of Gettysburg was dedicated with a two hour rhetorical speech that likened the event to Athenian funerals. It was worried that, should these classical values be forgotten, the United States would reach an eventual collapse, just like the societies of Greece and Rome, on which the US was built. This belief in the importance of a Greco-Roman foundation was so tightly held that a common way to mock the black population was by pointing out t...