A panorama of past and contemporary southern society are
captured in Bridging Southern Cultures by some of the South's
leading historians, anthropologists, literary critics,
musicologists, and folklorists. Crossing the chasms of
demographics, academic disciplines, art forms, and culture, this
exciting collection reaches aspects of southern heritage that
previous approaches have long obscured.
Virtually every dimension of southern identity receives
attention here. William Andrews, Thadious Davis, Sue Bridwell
Beckham, Richard Megraw, and Joyce Marie Jackson offer engaging
reflections on art, age, race, and gender. Bertram Wyatt-Brown
delivers a startling reading of Faulkner, revealing the tangled
history of southern modernism. Daniel C. Littlefield, Henry
Shapiro, and Charles Reagan Wilson provide important assessments of
Africanisms in southern culture, Appalachian studies, and the
blessing and burden of southern culture. John Shelton Reed probes
the humorous and awkward aspects of the South's midlife crisis.
John Lowe shows how the myth of the biracial southern family
complicated plantation-school narratives for both white and black
writers.
Showcasing the thought of preeminent southern intellectuals,
Bridging Southern Cultures is a timely assessment of the state of
contemporary southern studies.
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