This book reflects the best of contemporary scholarship on the
history of the American South. Each contributor is an
authority--one a Pulitzer Prize winner. The essays examine what
life was like for the slaves; for the victims of terror and
lynchings; for workers who dared strike and demand fairness; and
for dissenters who challenged the accepted truths. The essays are
grouped around three major research areas: history and the social
sciences, history and biography, and the new labor history.
This is a unique collection of essays by some of the world's
leading historians of the South, together with work by younger
scholars. All contributors, however, are working at the cutting
edge of their particular methodological approaches. The book, for
example, includes both an essay by Pulitzer Prize winner Rhys
Isaac, and one by Rutgers University graduate student Beth Hale.
Yet, both have a common concern to explore the reaches of the
Southern past through the dimension of ethnography.
The essays in the book are grouped according to theme. The
largest section, the social sciences and Southern history, includes
essays drawing heavily on the insights of anthropology of
ethnography and of statistical analysis. Each essay in the second
section is designed to illustrate how life history can be used to
illuminate much larger histoical themes and processes. The essays
in the last section on labor in the new South all illustrate, among
other things, the importance of drawing on the insights of
historians of women in order to redress the masculinist
presuppositons of labor historians. All the essays in the book, in
fact, reflect current concerns with gender and race in the
re-interpretation of the Southern past.
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