Publication

1986 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire, England

Language

English

Word Count

83,250 words, Guess

Page Count

333 pages

Identifiers

  • ISBN-100521306876
  • ISBN-139780521306874
  • Goodreads3997956
  • Library of Congress Control Number85030945
  • Open LibraryOL2548880M

Classifications

  • DDC975/.0072
  • LCCF209 .G724 1986

Description

This book is a major reassessment of an American region and a regional consciousness. Concentrating on moments of crisis in Southern history, as well as on major literary figures, Richard Gray shows how generations of Southerners have been engaged in 'writing the South', in reinventing their place even as they describe it. The first half of the book focuses on the colonial period, when the first white settlers tried to understand an unfamiliar land by seeing it in terms of familiar mythology; the years immediately prior to the Civil War, when the South had to defend its 'peculiar institution' of slavery; and the later nineteenth century, when Southerners were struggling to justify their past, explain the present, and prophesy the future. In the second half Dr Gray looks in detail at the twentieth-century South, and particularly at major writers of the Southern renaissance, such as William Faulkner and the Nashville Agrarians.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Cambridge studies in American literature and culture

Links

Other Editions

  • Writing the South: ideas of an American regionCambridge University Press1986-01-01

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