Magnolias Without Moonlight: The American South From Regional Confederacy To National Integration

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Transaction Publishers - 152 Seiten

The eleven ex-Confederate states continue to be thoroughly American and at the same time an exception to the national mainstream. The region's dual personality, how it came into being, and the purposes and interests it served is examined here, as well as its central role in the politics and "culture wars" flowing from the transformative Civil Rights Movement and the other social justice movements of the 1950s and 1960s.

The essays on this theme include a penetrating explication of C. Vann Woodward's masterpiece, Origins of the New South, 1877-1913, which is explicitly informed by the scholarship of the fifty years since the book's original publication. Hackney explores the political transformation of the South and the "identity politics" that continue to structure national political competition. The bi-racial nature of Southern society lies at the heart of Southern identity in all of its varieties. Understanding that identity is a purpose that underlies all of the chapters. Hackney uses quantitative analysis of hom-icide data to establish beyond doubt for the first time that the South has long been more violent, and that there is a cultural component of that violence that exists beyond the usual social predictors of higher homicide rates in the United States. He muses over the failure of the usual social predictors of votes for the Democratic Party to predict the party's performance in the region.

Timely, elegantly written, and wide in intellectual scope, Magnolias without Moonlight will be of interest to a broad readership of historians, cultural studies specialists, political scientists, and sociologists.

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Ausgewählte Seiten

Inhalt

Southern Violence
1
Origins of the New South in Retrospect
23
Origins of the New South in Retrospect Thirty Years Later
49
The South as a Counterculture
59
The Clay County Origins of Mr Justice Black The Populist as Insider
69
Little Rock and the Promise of America
77
C Vann Woodward 1908 1999 In Memoriam
83
The Contradictory South
93
Identity Politics Southern Style
109
Shades of Freedom in America
123
Index
143
Urheberrecht

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Beliebte Passagen

Seite 129 - Man being born, as has been proved, with a title to perfect freedom and an uncontrolled enjoyment of all the rights and privileges of the law of Nature...
Seite 65 - All the articles bear in the same sense upon the book's title-subject: all tend to support a Southern way of life against what may be called the American or prevailing way; and all as much as agree that the best terms in which to represent the distinction are contained in the phrase, Agrarian versus Industrial.
Seite 1 - ... revolts, robed night riders engaged in systematic terrorism, unknown assassins, church burners, and other less physical expressions of a South whose mode of action is frequently extreme.2 The image is so pervasive that it compels the attention of anyone interested in understanding the South. HC...
Seite 19 - US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Vital Statistics of the United States, 1974, Vol. II, section 5, life tables. 63. Lyssa Waters, " 'Why I Became a Gynecologist . . .': Four Men Tell All,
Seite 126 - This liberty is the proper end and object of authority and cannot subsist without it; and it is a liberty to that only which is good, just, and honest. This liberty you are to stand for, with the hazard not only of your goods, but of your lives, if need be. Whatsoever crosseth this is not authority, but a distemper thereof.
Seite 20 - EJ Hobsbawm, Primitive Rebels: Studies in Archaic Forms of Social Movement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New York: WW Norton, 1959); EP Thompson, "The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century...
Seite 18 - Being Southern, then, inevitably involves a feeling of persecution at times and a sense of being a passive, insignificant object of alien or impersonal forces. Such a historical experience has fostered a world view that supports the denial of responsibility and locates threats to the region outside the region and threats to the person outside the self.
Seite 77 - the problem of the twentieth century" would be "the problem of the color line...
Seite 18 - Southerners when they are defending their region against attack from outside forces: abolitionists, the Union Army, carpetbaggers, Wall Street and Pittsburgh, civil rights agitators, the federal government, feminism, socialism, tradeunionism, Darwinism, Communism, atheism, daylight-saving time, and other by-products of modernity.

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