
Storytelling, History, and the Postmodern South: The Life of a Soldier of Fortune
Author(s): Jason Phillips (Editor) (Author)
- Publisher: LSU Press
- Publication Date: 30 Jun. 2013
- Edition: 1st
- Language: English
- Print length: 250 pages
- ISBN-10: 9780807150344
- ISBN-13: 0807150347
Book Description
The contributors examine white southern narratives from multiple, fresh perspectives and consider ways in which storytelling helped shape identity and mold scholarship over time. Bertram Wyatt-Brown argues that William Percy’s life and work blurred fact and fiction as he negotiated the anti-intellectual conventions of a rural, hierarchical South as a cosmopolitan and homosexual. Orville Vernon Burton and Ian Binnington investigate nationalism, local allegiances, and the imagined community of the Confederacy. Farrell O’Gorman, Jewel L. Spangler, David A. Davis, Robert Jackson, Anne Marshall, K. Stephen Prince, and Jim Downs explore diverse topics such as southern Gothic fiction and the centrality of religion, white trash autobiographies, the “”professional southerner”” in literature and criticism, and the “”one-drop rule”” of racial taxonomy in America.
Like Ellison, these writers look beyond ideology and race, including how often-overlooked, basic elements of a work, such as its form, plot, aesthetics, or genre, can re- or deconstruct white southern power. Showcasing new ways of interpreting texts, they encourage historians and literary scholars to move beyond theory to engage the historical context of southern stories and storytelling while reading evidence more deeply and stories more broadly.
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