59 research outputs found

    The New Southern Studies and Rethinking the Question, “Is There Still a South?”

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    Hurtin’ Words: Debating Family Problems in the Twentieth-Century South

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    When Tammy Wynette sang D-I-V-O-R-C-E, she famously said she spelled out the hurtin\u27 words to spare her child the pain of family breakup. In this innovative work, Ted Ownby considers how a wide range of writers, thinkers, activists, and others defined family problems in the twentieth-century American South. Ownby shows that it was common for both African Americans and whites to discuss family life in terms of crisis, but they reached very different conclusions about causes and solutions. In the civil rights period, many embraced an ideal of Christian brotherhood as a way of transcending divisions. Opponents of civil rights denounced brotherhoodism as a movement that undercut parental and religious authority. Others, especially in the African American community, rejected the idea of family crisis altogether, working to redefine family adaptability as a source of strength. Rather than attempting to define the experience of an archetypal southern family, Ownby looks broadly at contexts such as political and religious debates about divorce and family values, southern rock music, autobiographies, and more to reveal how people in the South used the concept of the family as a proxy for imagining a better future or happier past.https://egrove.olemiss.edu/libarts_book/1119/thumbnail.jp

    Mastered by the Clock: Time, Slavery, and Freedom in the American South

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    Reviewing the South: The Literary Marketplace and the Southern Renaissance, 1920–1941.

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