Between the years 1865 and 1880, more travelers than in any period outside the
Civil War streamed to an American South to write of the region. Through these writings,
a literate Northern readership learned of a postwar South, a newly re-annexed territory of
the United States. In this thesis, I argue that contextualizing these travel accounts and the
region of the South itself as complicit with broader discourses of Western imperialism is
a productive way to examine both the history and the places of Southern Reconstruction.
Additionally, I contend that the tensions written through these travel narratives around
the very ways travelers scripted Southern scenes are themselves constitutive elements of
a Southern identity and history.
Moving through discussions of three particular themes found throughout these
postbellum travel accounts - discourses of civilization, descriptions and representations
of 'nature' and landscape, and encounters with rural white poverty, this thesis examines
the ways Northern travelers grappled with the South's 'double placement' within an
imperial framework. Simultaneously an occupied imperial territory of the United States
and part of the United States itself, a postbellum South was paradoxically situated in
reference to both 'the North' and 'the nation' at large, a tension found throughout these
travel writings.
Through these discussions, this thesis endeavors to provide a critical engagement
with textual representations of a postwar South, representations typically treated in a very
superficial and quite straightforward manner. Arguing for a very different treatment of
these texts, I attempt to show that situating them within an imperial framing provides a
new look at old stories about Southern occupation and Reconstruction in the midnineteenth
century.Arts, Faculty ofGeography, Department ofGraduat