Reading Southern History: Essays on Interpreters and Interpretations

This collection of essays examines the contributions of some of the most notable interpreters of southern history and culture, furthering our understanding of the best historical work produced on the region.

 

Historian Glenn Feldman gathers together a group of essays that examine the efforts of important scholars to discuss and define the South's distinctiveness. The volume includes 18 chapters on such notable historians as John Hope Franklin, Anne Firor Scott, Frank L. Owsley, W. J. Cash, and C. Vann Woodward, written by 19 different researchers, both senior historians and emerging scholars, including Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, John Shelton Reed, Bruce Clayton, and Ted Ownby. The essays examine the major work or works of each scholar under consideration as well as that scholar's overall contribution to the study of southern history.

Reading Southern History will enlighten readers on the more compelling themes currently and traditionally explored by southern historians. It will appeal greatly to professors and students as a valuable multidisciplinary introduction to the study of southern history, since several of the essays are on scholars who are working outside the discipline of history proper, in the fields of political science, sociology, journalism, and economics. Feldman's collection, therefore, sheds light on a broad spectrum of themes important in southern history, including the plight of poor whites, race, debates over race and class, the "reconstruction syndrome," continuity versus discontinuity in relation to blacks and whites, and regional culture and distinctiveness.

Reading Southern History will be valuable to students and scholars of women's studies, African American history, working-class history, and ethnic studies, as well as traditional southern history. Most important, the publication makes a significant contribution to the development and ongoing study of the historiography of the South.

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Reading Southern History: Essays on Interpreters and Interpretations

This collection of essays examines the contributions of some of the most notable interpreters of southern history and culture, furthering our understanding of the best historical work produced on the region.

 

Historian Glenn Feldman gathers together a group of essays that examine the efforts of important scholars to discuss and define the South's distinctiveness. The volume includes 18 chapters on such notable historians as John Hope Franklin, Anne Firor Scott, Frank L. Owsley, W. J. Cash, and C. Vann Woodward, written by 19 different researchers, both senior historians and emerging scholars, including Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, John Shelton Reed, Bruce Clayton, and Ted Ownby. The essays examine the major work or works of each scholar under consideration as well as that scholar's overall contribution to the study of southern history.

Reading Southern History will enlighten readers on the more compelling themes currently and traditionally explored by southern historians. It will appeal greatly to professors and students as a valuable multidisciplinary introduction to the study of southern history, since several of the essays are on scholars who are working outside the discipline of history proper, in the fields of political science, sociology, journalism, and economics. Feldman's collection, therefore, sheds light on a broad spectrum of themes important in southern history, including the plight of poor whites, race, debates over race and class, the "reconstruction syndrome," continuity versus discontinuity in relation to blacks and whites, and regional culture and distinctiveness.

Reading Southern History will be valuable to students and scholars of women's studies, African American history, working-class history, and ethnic studies, as well as traditional southern history. Most important, the publication makes a significant contribution to the development and ongoing study of the historiography of the South.

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Overview

This collection of essays examines the contributions of some of the most notable interpreters of southern history and culture, furthering our understanding of the best historical work produced on the region.

 

Historian Glenn Feldman gathers together a group of essays that examine the efforts of important scholars to discuss and define the South's distinctiveness. The volume includes 18 chapters on such notable historians as John Hope Franklin, Anne Firor Scott, Frank L. Owsley, W. J. Cash, and C. Vann Woodward, written by 19 different researchers, both senior historians and emerging scholars, including Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, John Shelton Reed, Bruce Clayton, and Ted Ownby. The essays examine the major work or works of each scholar under consideration as well as that scholar's overall contribution to the study of southern history.

Reading Southern History will enlighten readers on the more compelling themes currently and traditionally explored by southern historians. It will appeal greatly to professors and students as a valuable multidisciplinary introduction to the study of southern history, since several of the essays are on scholars who are working outside the discipline of history proper, in the fields of political science, sociology, journalism, and economics. Feldman's collection, therefore, sheds light on a broad spectrum of themes important in southern history, including the plight of poor whites, race, debates over race and class, the "reconstruction syndrome," continuity versus discontinuity in relation to blacks and whites, and regional culture and distinctiveness.

Reading Southern History will be valuable to students and scholars of women's studies, African American history, working-class history, and ethnic studies, as well as traditional southern history. Most important, the publication makes a significant contribution to the development and ongoing study of the historiography of the South.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780817313319
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Publication date: 04/30/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 986 KB

About the Author

Glenn Feldman is Assistant Professor of History at the Center for Labor Education and Research at The University of Alabama at Birmingham and the prize-winning author of Politics, Society, and the Klan in Alabama, 1915-1949.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: The Pursuit of Southern History - Glenn Feldman 1. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips and the Beginnings of Southern History - Junius P. Rodriguez 2. Broadus Mitchell: Economic Historian of the South - Jacquelyn Dowd Hall 3. E. Merton Coulter and the Political Culture of Southern Historiography - Fred Arthur Bailey 4. Frank L. Owsley’s Plain Folk of the Old South after Fifty Years - Anthony Gene Carrey 5. W. E. B. Du Bois: Ambiguous Journey to the Black Working Class - Joe W. Trotter 6. Rupert B. Vance: A Sociologist’s View of the South - John Shelton Reed and Daniel Joseph Singal 7. Charles S. Sydnor’s Quest for a Suitable Past - Fred Arthur Bailey 8. W. J. Cash: A Native Son Confronts the Past - Bruce Clayton 9. Defning “The South’s Number One Problem”: V. O. Key, Jr., and the Study of Twentieth-Century Southern Politics - Kari Frederickson 10. C. Vann Woodward, Southern Historian - John Herbert Roper 11. John Hope Franklin: Southern History in Black and White - John White 12. A. Elizabeth Taylor: Searching for Southern Suffragists - Judith N. McArthur 13. David M. Potter: Lincoln, Abundance, and Sectional Crisis - David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler 14. David Herbert Donald: Southerner as Historian of the Nation - Jean H. Baker 15. Kenneth Stampp’s Peculiar Reputation - James Oakes 16. Continuity and Change: George Brown Tindall and the Post-Reconstruction South - Susan Youngblood Ashmore 17. Anne Firor Scott: Writing Women into Southern History - Anastatia Sims 18. “Ethos Without Ethic”: Samuel S. Hill and Southern Religious History - Ted Ownby Notes Select Bibliography Contributors Index
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