Since the eighteenth century, a vast range of thinkers, artists, writers, and critics have wrestled with the notion that something distinct characterizes life in the American South. But in this sweeping new intellectual and cultural history, Charles Reagan Wilson reveals that there has never been a singular understanding of this "southern way of life." Considering nearly three centuries of regional expression in history, literature, music, recreation, religion, and more, produced by those inside and outside the region, Wilson argues that the consciousness associated with the American South is best understood by examining three related yet discrete ideas that have evolved over time: southern civilization, the southern way of life, and southern living. The story he tells is not of an essential South but of one marked by contestations, contingencies, and change. Wilson draws on multiple histories, disciplines, geographies, and cultural strains to show how ideas of southern culture have been plural and dynamic, complicated always by race and class. This monumental study promises to shape and invigorate writing about southern culture for years to come.
Charles Reagan Wilson is professor emeritus of history and southern studies at the University of Mississippi.
Timely and essential. . . . Cross-Border Cosmopolitans is convincingly driven by a premise, that of the need to 'excavate, recover and reconstruct' the history of the African diaspora in North America which Adjetey argues is an important part of the history of the Atlantic world."--Ethnic and Racial Studies [Charles Reagan Wilson] knows all there is to know about Southern culture, and then some. His 1,600-page half-tonne truck of a book, Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (1989), was a landmark work that, in this 600-page epic, has found its narrative partner . . . . He ranges across the full story, from fine oratory to racial epithets, from great literatures to two-dime records, from classical mansions to juke joints . . . . Wilson has spent his life turning the South from something not forgotten into something born again."--The New Statesman An impressive and elucidating work of cultural history"--Publishers Weekly This book is a masterful study . . . . engaging, enlightening, and deeply relevant--an impressive and fitting accomplishment for Wilson's already storied career."--The Civil War Monitor What makes this book a commanding work of scholarship is the subtlety of Wilson's exploration of the centuries-long evolution of regional identity, its engagement with questions of authority, and its adaptation to changing social and economic conditions. . . . This work, the product of a distinguished career, powerfully shows that southern cultures and identities remain vital scholarly subjects."-North Carolina Historical Review