For over a century cotton production influenced the folklife of
the Carolina Piedmont. In the wake of the reconstruction in the
1870s the Piedmont sprouted a number of industrial towns whose
cotton mills utilized the area's inexpensive power, labor, and
materials.Simultaneously. A system of tenant farming evolved,
creating a class of improvised black and white farmers. Their
interaction with small-town elites helped to create a distinctive
culture that is the fascinating backdrop of this amiable
book.
As is revealed here, the Piedmont's agricultural past shapes
contemporary values and attitudes. Family, hospitality,
conservatism, individuality, and an acceptance of slower pace
typify the foothills culture in the western region of the
Carolinas. They foster traits that color the folklore, the
foodways, the domestic architecture.Proliferating in this region of
American Southeast are many of the verbal and social
characteristics that outsiders pronounce to be distinctively
"southern" -the southern accent in its many variations, family
reunions, flea-market shopping, camp meetings, and revivals.
General
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