Since the Civil War whites and blacks have struggled over the meanings and uses of the Southern past. Indeed, today's controversies over flying the Confederate flag, renaming schools and streets, and commemorating the Civil War and the civil rights movement are only the latest examples of this ongoing divisive contest over issues of regional identity and heritage. The Southern Past argues that these battles are ultimately about who has the power to determine what we remember of the past, and whether that remembrance will honor all Southerners or only select groups. For more than a century after the Civil War, elite white Southerners systematically refined a version of the past that sanctioned their racial privilege and power. In the process, they filled public spaces with museums and monuments that made their version of the past sacrosanct. Yet, even as segregation and racial discrimination worsened, blacks contested the white version of Southern history and demanded inclusion. Streets became sites for elaborate commemorations of emancipation and schools became centers for the study of black history. This counter-memory surged forth, and became a potent inspiration for the civil rights movement and the black struggle to share a common Southern past rather than a divided one. W. Fitzhugh Brundage's searing exploration of how those who have the political power to represent the past simultaneously shape the present and determine the future is a valuable lesson as we confront our national past to meet the challenge of current realities.
This collection presents fresh and innovative perspectives on how southerners across two centuries and from Texas to North Carolina have interpreted their past.
For them, the life ofJesus provided inspiration for reform, and through that inspiration another tradition of evangelical Protestantism emerged by the early twentieth century. D issenters Frank W. Barnett edited the Alabama Baptist and ...
God Shakes Creation (Cohn), 164 God's Little Acre (Lester), 113 God's Trombones (Johnson), 150, 153 “golden age,” 74, ... 214, 217 Gunther, John, 197 Gutman, Herbert, 313 Hackney, Sheldon, 219 Haggard, Merle, 319 Hale, Grace Elizabeth, ...
Before his death in 1870, Robert E. Lee penned a letter to Col. Charles Marshall in which he argued that we must cast our eyes backward in times of turmoil...
"This is a probing book about the hold of the past, experienced largely as heritage and memory and not as historical understanding, on a whole region and people.
See also Gary Ginell , with Roy Lee Brown , Milton Brown and the Founding of Western Swing ( Urbana , 1994 ) . 39. Peter Guralnik , Last Train to Memphis : The. 36. Monroe is quoted in Russell , Blacks , Whites , and Blues ...
Daniel J. Singal, The War Within: From Victorian to Modernist Thought in the South (Chapel Hill, 1982), 373. ... Pat Watters, Down to Now: Reflections on the Southern Civil Rights Movement (New York, 1971), 30. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48.
In this book, the author addresses the interrelated themes of southern identity, southern distinctiveness, and the strains of irony that characterize much of the South's historical experience.
The essays in Manners and Southern History analyze these topics and more. Scholars here investigate the myriad ways in which southerners from the Civil War through the civil rights movement understood manners.
"Goldfield looks at an array of issues from the Thomas Jefferson-Sally Hemmings controversy to debates over the Confederate flag to the proliferation of African American history museums and monuments in the region.