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Southern Character: Essays in Honor of Bertram Wyatt-Brown
Hardback

Southern Character: Essays in Honor of Bertram Wyatt-Brown

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A rich and diverse look at the many identities of a rich and diverse region. More than an homage to a gifted historian, it is a stand-alone, interdisciplinary inquiry into just how complicated this thing called ‘the South’ can be. It’s all here, from literature to politics, race to religion, gender to genealogy, Old South to New–with voodoo and a doomed barge canal as added twists. Fascinating and absolutely up-to-date. –John Mayfield, author of Counterfeit Gentlemen

Honors a truly preeminent scholar with essays of very high quality and clear significance. No historian has assayed the ‘southern character’ more cogently than has Bertram Wyatt-Brown. From start to finish throughout this volume his former students affirm his great achievements and convincingly elaborate on them. –James Stewart, Macalester College emeritus Bertram Wyatt-Brown (b. 1932) is one of America’s most recognized and quoted historians. His work on honor, war, manhood, and religion, as well as his deeply interdisciplinary approach, has profoundly influenced the way historians understand the South.

The essays in this volume honor Wyatt-Brown and his work by using the concept of southern identities as a jumping-off point, examining a wide range of topics. Southern Character explores Quaker antislavery in Virginia, Lincoln’s sense of southern honor, white and black uses of voodoo, contemporary southern conservatives’ struggle for place, and the behavior of Confederate women during Sherman’s invasion.

More than a festschrift, this volume demonstrates that southern identity is plural, not monolithic, and reveals how the region’s uniqueness marginalizes many populations that contribute to southernness. Lisa Tendrich Frank is the editor of Women in the American Civil War: An Encyclopedia. She lives in Tallahassee, Florida. Daniel Kilbride, associateprofessor of history at John Carroll University, is the author of An American Aristocracy: Southern Planters in Antebellum Philadelphia. A volume in the series Southern Dissent, edited by Stanley Harrold and Randall M. Miller

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
6 November 2011
Pages
368
ISBN
9780813036908

A rich and diverse look at the many identities of a rich and diverse region. More than an homage to a gifted historian, it is a stand-alone, interdisciplinary inquiry into just how complicated this thing called ‘the South’ can be. It’s all here, from literature to politics, race to religion, gender to genealogy, Old South to New–with voodoo and a doomed barge canal as added twists. Fascinating and absolutely up-to-date. –John Mayfield, author of Counterfeit Gentlemen

Honors a truly preeminent scholar with essays of very high quality and clear significance. No historian has assayed the ‘southern character’ more cogently than has Bertram Wyatt-Brown. From start to finish throughout this volume his former students affirm his great achievements and convincingly elaborate on them. –James Stewart, Macalester College emeritus Bertram Wyatt-Brown (b. 1932) is one of America’s most recognized and quoted historians. His work on honor, war, manhood, and religion, as well as his deeply interdisciplinary approach, has profoundly influenced the way historians understand the South.

The essays in this volume honor Wyatt-Brown and his work by using the concept of southern identities as a jumping-off point, examining a wide range of topics. Southern Character explores Quaker antislavery in Virginia, Lincoln’s sense of southern honor, white and black uses of voodoo, contemporary southern conservatives’ struggle for place, and the behavior of Confederate women during Sherman’s invasion.

More than a festschrift, this volume demonstrates that southern identity is plural, not monolithic, and reveals how the region’s uniqueness marginalizes many populations that contribute to southernness. Lisa Tendrich Frank is the editor of Women in the American Civil War: An Encyclopedia. She lives in Tallahassee, Florida. Daniel Kilbride, associateprofessor of history at John Carroll University, is the author of An American Aristocracy: Southern Planters in Antebellum Philadelphia. A volume in the series Southern Dissent, edited by Stanley Harrold and Randall M. Miller

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
6 November 2011
Pages
368
ISBN
9780813036908