Reinventing the South: Versions of a Literary Region

Reinventing the South: Versions of a Literary Region

by Mark Royden Winchell
ISBN-10:
0826216188
ISBN-13:
9780826216182
Pub. Date:
01/28/2006
Publisher:
University of Missouri Press
ISBN-10:
0826216188
ISBN-13:
9780826216182
Pub. Date:
01/28/2006
Publisher:
University of Missouri Press
Reinventing the South: Versions of a Literary Region

Reinventing the South: Versions of a Literary Region

by Mark Royden Winchell

Hardcover

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Overview

Before the Civil War, the South had a flourishing culture. In the dormant decades following the surrender at Appomattox, however, southerners devoted most of their energies to survival, neglecting such luxuries as literature. It was not until the 1920s that the South experienced a significant rebirth of literary activity.

Mark Royden Winchell’s book is divided into two sections. The first, entitled “The Nashville Renascence,” examines this resurgence of literature. This movement was partly an attempt to define or reinvent southern culture both socially and aesthetically, and the Fugitives and Agrarians were at the forefront. Essays in this section explore the political and social vision of the Agrarians; discuss prominent charter Agrarians John Gould Fletcher and Robert Penn Warren; and examine the influence the Fugitives and Agrarians have had on later southern literature, even into the twenty-first century.

The second section of the book, “The Lower South,” deals with writers outside the Nashville tradition, including William Faulkner and Tennessee Williams, as well as two novelists who combine elements of southern and western regionalism—William Humphrey and Cormac McCarthy. All of these figures belong to a “lower South,” a region unrelated to the Nashville literati and with an audience less insistently highbrow.

Winchell’s thoughtful and well-informed book includes the most extensive discussions to date of the work of Monroe K. Spears and Walter Sullivan. The essays in this cohesive collection build upon one another to demonstrate how the literary imagination can create different visions of a regional culture and different versions of a regional myth.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826216182
Publisher: University of Missouri Press
Publication date: 01/28/2006
Edition description: index
Pages: 272
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Mark Royden Winchell is Professor of English and Director of the Great Works of Western Civilization program at Clemson University. He is the author of several books, including “Too Good to Be True”: The Life and Work of Leslie Fiedler and Where No Flag Flies: Donald Davidson and the Southern Resistance, both available from the University of Missouri Press.

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