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    Book Reviews

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    Book reviews of: William F. Winter and the New Mississippi: A Biography. By Charles C. Bolton Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2013. Pp. vii, 368. Illustrations, map, acknowledgements, notes, index. 35.00cloth.ISBN:9781617037870.BornofConviction:WhiteMethodistsandMississippi’sClosedSociety.ByJosephT.Reiff.(NewYork:OxfordUniversityPress,2016.Acknowledgements,illustrations,map,notes,index.Pp.xxi,384.35.00 cloth. ISBN: 9781617037870. Born of Conviction: White Methodists and Mississippi’s Closed Society. By Joseph T. Reiff. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016. Acknowledgements, illustrations, map, notes, index. Pp. xxi, 384. 35 Hardcover. ISBN: 9780190246815). In Katrina’s Wake: The U.S. Coast Guard and the Gulf Coast Hurricanes of 2005. By Donald L. Canney. (Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010. Foreword, notes, index. Pp. xv, 228. 27.50cloth.)Slavery,RaceandConquestintheTropic:Lincoln,DouglasandtheFutureofAmerica.ByRobertE.May.(NewYork:CambridgeUniversityPress,2013.Acknowledgements,illustrations,maps,notes,index.Pp.xi,296.27.50 cloth.) Slavery, Race and Conquest in the Tropic: Lincoln, Douglas and the Future of America. By Robert E. May. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2013. Acknowledgements, illustrations, maps, notes, index. Pp. xi, 296. 80 cloth, 26.99paper,26.99 paper, 22 e-book. ISBN: 9780521132527.) Rivers of Sand: Creek Indian Emigration, Relocation, and Ethnic Cleansing in the American South. By Christopher D. Haveman. (Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 2016. Illustrations, preface, acknowledgments, notes on terminology, index. Pp. ix, 414. Trouble in Goshen: Plain Folk, Roosevelt, Jesus, and Marx in the Great Depression. By Fred C. Smith (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2014. Acknowledgements, illustrations, map notes, index. Pp. xi, 214. 60.00cloth.ISBN:9781617039560.)BuildersofaNewSouth:Merchants,Capital,andtheRemakingofNatchez,1865−1914.ByAaronD.Anderson(Jackson:UniversityPressofMississippi,2013.Acknowledgments,illustrations,photographs,notes,graphics,index.Pp.279.60.00 cloth. ISBN: 9781617039560.) Builders of a New South: Merchants, Capital, and the Remaking of Natchez, 1865-1914. By Aaron D. Anderson (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2013. Acknowledgments, illustrations, photographs, notes, graphics, index. Pp. 279. 40 cloth. ISBN: 978-1- 61703-667-5.) Adventurism and Empire: The Struggle for Mastery in the Louisiana- Florida Borderlands 1762-1803. By David Narrett. (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2015. Acknowledgements, illustrations, notes, index. Pp. xi, 365. 45cloth,45 cloth, 44.99 e-book. ISBN: 978-1-4696-1833-3.) Empty Sleeves: Amputation in the Civil War South. By Brian Craig Miller. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2015. Illustrations, acknowledgments, appendix, notes, index. Pp. xvi, 257. 79.95cloth,79.95 cloth, 29.95 paper. ISBN: 0820343327.) Signposts: New Directions in Southern Legal History. By Sally E. Hadden and Patricia Hagler Minter, eds. (Athens and London: The University of Georgia Press, 2013. Acknowledgements, illustrations, index. Pp. xi, 480. 69.95cloth,69.95 cloth, 26.95 paper, 26.95ebook.ISBN:978−0−8203−4499−7.)TheColorofChrist:TheSonofGodandtheSagaofRaceinAmerica.ByEdwardJ.BlumandPaulHarvey.(ChapelHill:UniversityofNorthCarolinaPress,2012.Pp.325.26.95 ebook. ISBN: 978-0-8203-4499-7.) The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America. By Edward J. Blum and Paul Harvey. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2012. Pp. 325. 32.50 Cloth. ISBN: 9780807835722.

    Acadian in the Southern Imagination: Race and Identity in Reconstruction Louisiana Newspapers 1862-1877

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    The emergence of Acadian identity as a reaction to Southern imagining has received little attention from historians of Louisiana Acadian history. Many scholars align with a narrative that centers American cultural adaptation which describe a process that begins with a split along class, not race lines, to form a Cajun identity which becomes, like other American immigrant stories, an element of American identity. The dominant historical narrative suggests that all elements of Acadian are incorporated into the overarching American identity. The Acadian-to-Cajun-qua-American-assimilation narrative implies and reinforces that the Cajun-American identity is superior and more socially acceptable than the Acadian identity. This study examines mostly English-language Louisiana newspapers of the Civil War and Reconstruction erasâ?? Acadian-related articles of various genres and subsequently uncovers patterns that trouble commonly held beliefs about Acadian identity in the Southern imagination. Louisiana editors and journalists did not portray Acadians as an economically disadvantaged class; rather, they depicted the population as racially inferior, foreign, and incapable of self-governance via a post-emancipation rhetoric that attributed to the ethnic group an ethos of violence, ignorance, indifference, and subhuman status. Anglos, regardless of political party, were determined to legitimize and prioritize their superior position in the national racial hierarchy. Editors and journalistsâ?? rhetoric served multiple political agendas by making Acadians the scapegoat of the period. Editors and journalistsâ?? scapegoating was a reaction to a crisis in the legitimacy of Acadians as part of the dominate American narrative. Anglo-run newspapers posit that Acadians were the existential threat to the country by describing the racially inferior Acadians as foreign which kept them on the racial periphery. Cajuns capitalized on the skewed narratives by commodifying their unique, but American, identity to attract tourism and patronage. This study is part of a growing corpus of work that rethinks Acadian identity as one shaped by an insidious Southern imagination and includes theories that recognize Acadian as a nuanced and fluid identity

    Acadian in the Southern Imagination: Race and Identity in Reconstruction Louisiana Newspapers 1862-1877

    No full text
    The emergence of Acadian identity as a reaction to Southern imagining has received little attention from historians of Louisiana Acadian history. Many scholars align with a narrative that centers American cultural adaptation which describe a process that begins with a split along class, not race lines, to form a Cajun identity which becomes, like other American immigrant stories, an element of American identity. The dominant historical narrative suggests that all elements of Acadian are incorporated into the overarching American identity. The Acadian-to-Cajun-qua-American-assimilation narrative implies and reinforces that the Cajun-American identity is superior and more socially acceptable than the Acadian identity. This study examines mostly English-language Louisiana newspapers of the Civil War and Reconstruction eras’ Acadian-related articles of various genres and subsequently uncovers patterns that trouble commonly held beliefs about Acadian identity in the Southern imagination. Louisiana editors and journalists did not portray Acadians as an economically disadvantaged class; rather, they depicted the population as racially inferior, foreign, and incapable of self-governance via a post-emancipation rhetoric that attributed to the ethnic group an ethos of violence, ignorance, indifference, and subhuman status. Anglos, regardless of political party, were determined to legitimize and prioritize their superior position in the national racial hierarchy. Editors and journalists’ rhetoric served multiple political agendas by making Acadians the scapegoat of the period. Editors and journalists’ scapegoating was a reaction to a crisis in the legitimacy of Acadians as part of the dominate American narrative. Anglo-run newspapers posit that Acadians were the existential threat to the country by describing the racially inferior Acadians as foreign which kept them on the racial periphery. Cajuns capitalized on the skewed narratives by commodifying their unique, but American, identity to attract tourism and patronage. This study is part of a growing corpus of work that rethinks Acadian identity as one shaped by an insidious Southern imagination and includes theories that recognize Acadian as a nuanced and fluid identity
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