this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2024
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You are making a case that the North and South felt separate from each other. And I haven't doubted that. I'm saying that both of those are under the umbrella of being American. Being American isn't just one of those, but rather encompassed both. In your examples they're specifically contrasting those two, not contrasting Southerners with Americans but rather Southerners with Northerners.
I'm not sure if you feel the things you said show that it was Southerner vs American as two separate things or if you've misunderstood what I've said. But they only show the North/South divide and not one between Americans and Southerners.
It's rejecting the idea "national democracy" in favour of "confederate republic of sovereign states". So it is rejecting the anti-slavery party's idea of how the government should be. More context would help, since the term "national democracy" doesn't bring up much. I'd wager it means "the whole country decides together" vs "states decide for themselves". Southerners were very much in favour of the latter.
It seems to be talking of "people of the South" not as an actual separate nation from Americans but as a grouping separate from "people of the North". And it also doesn't use the term American. None of your quotes do, actually.
It is just describing a situation where one part wants to separate from an empire. It doesn't contrast the term American with that of a Southerner or Confederate even. Not only is it lacking context such as the rest of the text but also more importantly the author. And historical context of the UK being pro-CSA to weaken the USA, so having a reason to spur on and support their separatism.
Yankee is a word for the Northerners. It's again the same North vs South, not American vs Southerner.