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Away Down South - A History of Southern Identity (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,517
Discovery Miles 25 170
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Away Down South - A History of Southern Identity (Hardcover)
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From the seventeenth century Cavaliers and Uncle Tom's Cabin to
Civil Rights museums and today's conflicts over the Confederate
flag, here is a brilliant portrait of southern identity, served in
an engaging blend of history, literature, and popular culture. In
this insightful book, written with dry wit and sharp insight, James
C. Cobb explains how the South first came to be seen-and then came
to see itself-as a region apart from the rest of America. As Cobb
demonstrates, the legend of the aristocratic Cavalier origins of
southern planter society was nurtured by both northern and southern
writers, only to be challenged by abolitionist critics, black and
white. After the Civil War, defeated and embittered southern whites
incorporated the Cavalier myth into the cult of the "Lost Cause,"
which supplied the emotional energy for their determined crusade to
rejoin the Union on their own terms. After World War I, white
writers like Ellen Glasgow, William Faulkner and other key figures
of "Southern Renaissance" as well as their African American
counterparts in the "Harlem Renaissance"-Cobb is the first to show
the strong links between the two movements-challenged the New South
creed by asking how the grandiose vision of the South's past could
be reconciled with the dismal reality of its present. The Southern
self-image underwent another sea change in the wake of the Civil
Rights movement, when the end of white supremacy shook the old
definition of the "Southern way of life"-but at the same time,
African Americans began to examine their southern roots more openly
and embrace their regional, as well as racial, identity. As the
millennium turned, the South confronted a new identity crisis
brought on by global homogenization: if Southern culture is
everywhere, has the New South become the No South? Here then is a
major work by one of America's finest Southern historians, a
magisterial synthesis that combines rich scholarship with
provocative new insights into what the South means to southerners
and to America as well.
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