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A provocative examination of literacy in the American South before
emancipation, countering the long-standing stereotype of the
South's oral tradition Schweiger complicates our understanding of
literacy in the American South in the decades just prior to the
Civil War by showing that rural people had access to a remarkable
variety of things to read. Drawing on the writings of four young
women who lived in the Blue Ridge Mountains, Schweiger shows how
free and enslaved people learned to read, and that they wrote and
spoke poems, songs, stories, and religious doctrines that were
circulated by speech and in print. The assumption that slavery and
reading are incompatible-which has its origins in the eighteenth
century-has obscured the rich literate tradition at the heart of
Southern and American culture.
This book offers a history of three generations of Baptist and Methodist clergymen in nineteenth-century Virginia, and through them of the congregations and communities in which they lived and worked. Unlike previous scholars, who examined Southern Protestantism as only a proslavery and pro-Confederate ideology, Schweiger takes a wider view and finds a broad transformation of the social and cultural context of religious experience in the region. She traces several major themes, such as the contrast between rural and urban experience, or the Methodist and Baptist schisms of the 1840's through the lives and careers of 800 clergy.
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